%'^^'\^' '"^^.'♦-^'\/ %^^^'\^'' % *' <■! 0^ .-^"^, ^o^ ^^"^ ^^ %v^ ^^^^^^ ^0* f^«^'' -o^ :] ^°-n^ t ^°-n^. ^.c.^' 4" . '< '-n^-f.^ =.^^i3i'- ^o^^ :^m^^ -^--0^ °''^»'" ^of '^M^^\ '-^^^^ v-o^ U'^ o I* , ^o A^ ..'., *. *"'- «^ A*5 »'" • y^^\ "^^s /^\. ^^fc/° '^'^^'H • %.^^ •'^^'° %/ "*^te' ""^-.^^ -'^^^^'^ ''--^^ "^'^^'' ^-^-"^ "^_ .o^o:^=.,•^o, /\.^;^/V ,c°.-:a;;:>- ./.v;^'/-^-.. '° •1 o '. -J 'bV .^^•V. •• A^ "\>k K> - «,^'"-^ v oGaa/x^ ^'XfL^^4i^--rA^(^LA^^ X HISTORY OF DECATUR COUNTY INDIANA ITS PEOPLE, INDUSTRIES AND INSTITUTIONS LEWIS A. HARDING Editor Member The American Historical Association; author, "The Preliminary Diplomacy of the Spanish-American War," a study in international law, "The Call of the Hour," "A Few Spoken Words," etc. With Biographical Sketches of Representative Citizens and Genealogical Records of Many of the Old Families ILLUSTRATED 1915 B. F. BOWEN & COMPANY, Inc. Indianapolis, Indiana .,y DEDICATION. The historian, who, as Schlegel says, is "a prophet looking back- wards," in these jubilee days of Indiana's first centennial, respectfully dedi- cates this work both to the memory of the pioneers of Decatur county and those departed, to keep their memory fragrant, and to the people of the future for the inspiration this record may be to those who follow in the never-ending flight of future days. T - \ 31 Aj^St EDITOR'S PREFACE In writing the liistory of a county, the local historian is confined to a relatively small unit and is not expected to go outside the limits of the county except so far as to make explanatory the relation of the county to contiguous counties or to the state at large. The historian is also handi- capped by all the tradition which is handed down through succeeding genera- tions, traditions with little or no historical liackground and bordering on the romantic. While tradition is often connected with history, it does not often carry with it the sulistratum of fact which should characterize real historical narrative. Personal feelings and quixotic whims find expression in the tales of our forbears and are repeated so often that they are finally accepted as the truth. The purpose of the editor of this history is to separate fiction from fact ; to present in a simple and succinct manner those facts which will show the place of Decatur county among its sister counties in the state; to preserve for future generations the story of the privations and hardships which confronted our good forefathers almost a century ago. The editor, prior to this time, had gathered a lot of mis-information as to the early events of eastern Indiana, and especially as to that part of the state now included within Decatur county. However, careful investiga- tion has proven that in most instances such supposed facts were nothing more than romantic tales, interesting, but with no basis of truth. Thus the editor of this history was depri\'ed of what he had considered a large amount of \'aluable historical data, but in the elaboration of this work it has been the constant aim to get exact historical information. This history is an attempt to present the real truth about the growth of he county, and every event which would not stand the historical test has been discarded. Thus, many tales of romance are necessarily omitted; many supposed facts ha\-e been found to be without the semblance of truth, and hence find no place in this volume. This history seeks to give such a review of the origin and development of the county as will make it possible for the people of today and of the future to appreciate the lives and labors of those who have made this county wliat it is now. We are proud of its towns, its br(jacl cultivated fields, its schools and churches, its beautiful homes. People take a par- donable pride in living in a county where peace and harmony dwell, where the people enjoy those blessings vouchsafed to them by the laws of an in- dulgent nation. In order that the present generation may breathe the same spirit which animated the pioneers of this county, it is necessary to go back to the time when the Indian roamed this part of the state; when the beaver plied his trade unmolested Ijy the white man; when the uncut forest and undrained swamps presented more terrors than the wild inhabitants thereof, it will be necessary to tell of the time when France had control of this territory and of the time when England drove the French from this country. The Re\'oluti<.nar\' War bears on the history of Uecatur countv and it comes in for a share of attention; the War of 1812 is still closer allied with the history of the county and it is briefly noticed. We have tried to recite these facts so that the coming generations may become familiar with tliem and thereby have a clearer understanding of the sterling men and women who have preceded them. May this presentation imbue us with a greater kne for our county, our state and our nation, and may we highly resolve that the achie\'ements (if the past shall insj^ire the present and future generations in Decatur county to still higher and greater achievements. LEWIS A. HARDIXG. FOREWORD All life and achievement is evolution; preserjT'wisdom comes from past experience, and present commercial prosperity has come only from past ex- ertion and sacrifice. The deeds and motives of the men who ha\-e gone before have been instrumental in shaping the destinies of later ■c<:immunities and state. The development of a new country was at once a task and a privilege. It required great courage, sacrifice and privation. Compare the present conditions of the people of Decatur county, Indiana, with what they were one hundred years ago. From a trackless wilderness and \-irgin land, it has come to be a center of prosperity and civilization, with millions of wealth, systems of railways, grand educational institutions, splendid indus- tries and valuable agricultural and mineral productions. Can any think- ing person be insensible to the fascination of the study which discloses the aspirations and efforts of the early pioneers who so strongly laid the foun- dation upon which has been reared the magnificent prosperity of later days? To perpetuate the story of these people and to trace and record the social, political and industrial progress of the community from its first inception is the function of the local historian. A sincere purpose to preserve facts and personal memoirs that are deserving of perpetuation, and which unite the present to the past, is the moti\'e for the present publicati(in. A spe- cially valuable and interesting department is that one devoted to the sketches of representative citizens of this county whose records deserve preservation because of their worth, effort and accomplishment. The publishers desire to extend their thanks to the persons who ha\-e so faithfully labored to this end. Thanks are also due to the citizens of Decatur county for the uniform kindness with which they have regarded this undertaking, and for their many services rendered in the gaining of necessary information. In placing the "History of Decatur County. Indiana,"" before the citi- zens, the pulalishers can conscientiously claim that they have carried out the plan as outlined in the prospectus. E\-ery ])iographical sketch in the work has been submitted for corrections to the party interested, and therefore any error of fact, if there lie an}-, is solely due to the person for whom the sketch was prepared. Confident that our eft'ort to please will fully meet the approbation of the public, we are. Respectfully, THE PUBLISHERS. CONTENTS CHAPTER I— RELATED STATE HISTORY 33 First White Man in Northwest Territory — English and French Claims — Three Successive Sovereign Flags Over Present Indiana Territory — Pass- ing of the Indians — Battle of Fallen Timbers — Northwest Territory — Early Settlements — Activities of the Traders — French and Indian War — Pontiac's Conspiracy — Northwest Territory and Quebec Act — Revolutionary Period — ■ George Rogers Clark and His Campaign — First Surveys and Early Set- tlers — Ordinance of 1787 — First Stage of Government Under the Ordinance — Second Stage — Organization of the Northwest Territory — Representative Stage of Government — First Counties Organized — First Territorial Legis- lature of Northwest Territory — Division of 1800 — Census of Northwest Territory in 1800 — Settlements in Indiana Territory in 1800 — First Stage of Territorial Government — Changes in Boundary Lines of Indiana — Second Stage of Territorial Government — The Legislative Council — The First Gen- eral Assemblies — Congressional Delegates of Indiana Territory — Efforts to Establish Slavery in Indiana — The Indian Lands — Organization of Coun- ties — Changes in the Constitution of Indana — Capitals of Northwest Terri- tory and of Indiana — Military History of State — Political History — Gov- ernors of Indiana — A Century of Growth — Natural Resources. CHAPTER II— GEOLOGY AND TOPOGRAPHY 63 Location and Size of Decatur County — Geology and Physiography — The Soils in Detail — Miami Silt Loam — Upland Clay Loam — Miami Sand Loam — Mechanical Analysis of Decatur County Soils. CHAPTER III— COUNTY ORGANIZATION 69 Early Settlement — Opening of Government Land Office at Brookville — First Land Patent to John Shellhorn — Probable First Settler, John Fugit — Eighty-nine Land Entries the First Year — Newcomers in 1821 — One Hun- dred and Forty Votes Cast in County That Year — -Creation of Decatur County — First County Election — Beginning of Law and Order — First Gen- eral Election — Court House History — The Tree on the Court House Tower — The County Jail. CHAPTER IV— COUNTY OFFICERS 87 County Commissioner System from 1822 to 1824 — Board of Justices — Second Group of County Commissioners — Second Board of Justices — General County Officers from Date of County Organization to 1915 — Notes on Early Elec- tions — Roster of State Senators and Representatives. CONTENTS. CHAPTER V— TOWNSHIPS AND TOWNS OF DECATUR COUNTY 95 Date of Organization of the Several Townships — The Squatter — The First Settler in Adams Township — County-Seat Hopes Shattered — Early Mail Fa- .cilities — Primitive Conditions — Early Wearing Apparel — Wolves Numerous and Rattlesnakes Abundant — Fever and Ague — W^ild Game — Distilleries — Pioneer Schools — St. Omer- — Visions of Railroads — Education — Early Sub- scription Schools — Teacher Killed by Pupil — Village of Adams — Downey- ville — Rockville's "Boom" Punctured — St. Paul — Varied Industries — Disas- trous Fires — Clay Township — Buck-run, Clifty, Middlefork Settlement, Duck Creek, Milford, Burney, Wyncoop — Fugit Township — First Store in County at Spring Hill — Kingston, St. Maurice, Clarksburg — Jackson Township — Forest Hill. Waynesburg, Alert, Sardinia — Marion Township — Millhousen and Other Villages — Clinton Township — County Poor Farm — Sandusky — Salt Creek Township — Newpoint, Smith's Crossing, Mechanicsburg, New Pennington and Rossburg — Sand Creek Township — Westport, Letts and Harris City — Washington Township Almost Exact Center of the County. CHAPTER VI— THE CITY OF GREENSBURG 155 Song of an "Inland Town" — Site of Present County Seat Entered by Thomas Hendricks in 1820 — Location of County Seat in 1822 — Prices Paid for First Lots — City's Early Growth — Queer Regulations — Incorporation — Fire De- partment — Police Department — ^\'aterworks and Sewerage System — City Hall — Street Paving — Business and Professional Directory in 1915 — -Mileage and Valuation of Telegraph and Telephone Lines in County — Greensburg Improvement Association — Commercial Club — Business Men's Association — • Greensburg Chautauqua — Associated Charities — Postoffice — Public Library — Young Men's Christian Association — Mimicipal Financial Statement — City Officers and Heads of Departments. CHAPTER VII— EDUCATION 182 Early Rural Schools and Primitive Curriculum — Treating of Pupils at Christmas Time — Roll of Pioneer Teachers — Qualifications of Teachers — Decatur County Seminary and Noted Alumni Thereof — Private Schools — First Free Schools — Graded Schools — Teachers' Gatherings — Normal Schools — Lincoln Flag Raising Creates Riot — School Supervision — First School Building in Greensburg — Creation of High School System — Township and Village Schools — Consolidated School System — School Athletics and Domes- tic Science and Agricultural Training. CHAPTER VIII— CHURCHES OF DECATUR COUNTY 204 Marked Religious Change During Past Three-Quarters of a Century — Fore- fathers Not as Good as Usually Painted — Sermons Worked Out With Aid of Flask — Primitive Houses of Worship — Baptists and Methodists First to Come — Interesting Reminiscences — Methodist Episcopal Churches — Organ to Blame for Schism — Methodist Protestant Church — Pastor's Unique Court- ship — Early Ministerial Experiences — .\frican Methodist Church — First Methodist Sermon in County in September, 1822 — Baptist Churches — First Congregation .-Vntedated Organization of County — Presbyterian Churches — First Congregation Organized in 1823 — United Presbyterian Church — CONTENTS. Christian Cluirches — Beginning of Butler College — L'nited Brethren in Christ — Pentecost Church — German Lutheran Church — Episcopal Church — •Church of God — Christian (Nevvlight) Church — German Methodist Episco- pal Church — Christian Science Society — United Brethren — Catholic Churches — Oldest Parish in County at Millhousen. CHAPTER IX— BENCH AND BAR , 278 Judicial History of Decatur County — Marked Changes Under the Constitu- tion of 1852— A Mystery of the Olden Days— Early Murder Trials — Step- ping-Stone to Congress — Early Bar History — Prominent Figures of the Bench and Bar — Roster of Decatur County Attorneys — Dean of the Bar — Some Interesting Reminiscences. CHAPTER X— BANKS AND BANKING 298 Citizens Bank of Greensburg — Third National Bank — Greensburg National Bank — Westport National Bank — Clarksburg State Bank — Alert State Bank — The St. Paul Bank — Newpoint State Bank — Burney State Bank — Greens- burg Building and Loan Association — Union Trust Company — ^Workmen's Building and Loan Association — St. Paul Building .Association — Decatur County's Only Bank Failure. CHAPTER XI— SECRET SOCIETIES AND FRATERNITIES 307 Free and .Accepted Masons and Allied Organizations — Knights of Pythias — Independent Order of Odd Fellows — Modern Woodmen of .America — Im- proved Order of Red Men — Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks — Hay- makers-i-Lo}'al Order of Moose — Knights of St. John. CHAPTER XII— SOCIAL AND LITERARY CLUBS 329 Greensburg Department Club — Kappa Kappa Kappa — The Cycle — The Mothers' Circle — The Progress Club — The Woman's Club — The Tourist Club — The Fortnightly Club — The Research Club — Literary Club of 191-1 — Married Ladies' Musicale — The Cecilians — The -Athenaeum. CHAPTER XIII— THE MEDICAL PROFESSION 341 A Woman Probably the First Medical Practitioner in County — Roster of Early Physicians and Those Now Practicing in County — Interesting Rem- iniscences by Dr. J. H. .Alexander — Decatur County Medical Society — Trained X'urses — Opticians — Pension Board. CHAPTER XIV— NEWSPAPERS OF DECATUR COUNTY 365 -Apostrophe to the Newspaper — Reckless Use of Adjectives— Struggles of the Early Editors — Greensburg Chronicle, First Paper in County. Started in Spring of 1830 — Orville Thompson's Review of Decatur Count}' News- papers I'p to the Year 1895 — "Unmarked and Forgotten" Papers — Present Newspapers of the County. CHAPTER XV— AGRICULTURE 379 Greeley's Estimate of Indiana Farmers — Flax, Most Important Crop of the Pioneer, No Longer Cultivated — Leading Breeders of Fancy Stock — Cattle CONTENTS. Feeding — Tomato-Growing Industry — The County Agent — Agricultural Statistics — County Agricultural Society — Waynesburg Farmers' Club — Farmers' Club of Springfield — Farmers' Institute — Patrons of Husbandry — Decatur County Fairs. CHAPTER XVI— ROADS AXD TRANSPORTATION 390 Blazed Trails and the Wilson Trace — First Movement Toward Roads — Turnpikes — Water Transportation — Railroads of Decatur County — Greens- burg Union Depot — Indianapolis & Cincinnati Traction Line — Railroad Statistics. CHAPTER XVII— THE "UNDERGROUND RAILROAD" 398 Pronounced Anti-Slavery Sentiment — Decatur County Colonization Society and Its Rival, the .Anti-Slavery Society — Bickerings Between Neighbors and Schisms in Churches — Main Trunks of "Underground Railroad" — Its Officers and Conductors — The Donnell Rescue Case and Other Incidents — Fugitive Slave Law — Knights of the Golden Circle. CHAPTER XVIII— DEC.VTUR COUNTY'S MILITARY RECORD. 408 Soldiers of the Revolution in Decatur County — The Case of Hugh Mont- gomery — Soldiers of the War of 1812 — Mexican War — The Civil War- Roster of Commissioned Officers — Regiments Represented by Decatur County Soldiers — Wilder Battery — Artillery and Rifle Companies — Greens- burg Band Goes to Front — Decatur County Losses: Killed in Action, Died of Wound's and Died in Prison — Morgan's Raid — A War-Time Convention — Riot in Greensburg — Civil War Statistics — Relief for Soldiers' Families — Roll of Honor — Grand .Army of the Republic — Woman's Relief Corps — Daughters of the .American Revolution. CHAPTER XIX— GERMANS AND THE GERMAN INFLUENCE 464 Immigration from the Fatherland — Teutonic Settlements in Decatur County — A Self-Reliant People — Maximillian Schneider and the Millhousen Settle- ment — List of Naturalized Citizens. CHAPTER XX— EARLY ELECTIONS IN DECATUR COUNTY 470 State Politics from 1816 to 1824 — Straw V'otes at County Musters — First Presidential Election — Rapid Increase in Voting Population — First County Election in 1823 — First Township Elections — Election During Civil War — Bitter Contest of 1S60. CHAPTER XXI— LITERARY GLIMPSES 479 Efforts to Emulate the Bard of Avon — Poets of More Than Local Fame — Some Interesting Samples of Decatur County Poetry — The Late Will Cum- back and Others Who Have Brought to the County a Measure of Literary Distinction — Lewis -A. Harding and "The Call of the Hour." CHAPTER XXII— DECATUR COUNTY INDUSTRIES 497 Primitive Mills of the Pioneers — The First Tanyard — Blacksmiths Manu- facturers of Farm Implements — Early Woolen Mills — First Furniture Fac- CONTENTS. tory — Manufacturing Industries in 1874 — Greeley Limestone Company — Contractors — Meek Ice Company — Bromwell Brush and Wire Works — Garland Milling Company. CHAPTER XXIII— SIDELIGHTS ON DECATUR COUNTY HISTORY 504 Scene of "The Hoosier Schoolmaster" — Well-Known Residents of the Clifty Neighborhood Typified in Celebrated Novel — Doctor Smalley's Part in Famous Robbery Conspiracy — List of Leading Taxpayers in 1862 — Popu- lation Statistics — Temperance Movement and "Wet" and "Dry" Vote in 1847 — Woman's Christian Temperance Union — Decatur County People Who Have Risen to Distinction — Odd Fellovi's' Home — The Old Seminary — A Religious Revival — A Band Tournament — "Sartor Resartus" — A Versatile Preacher — Record-Breaking Pioneer — Sun Eclipsed by Wild Pigeons — A Story for Men Only — Greensburg's First Lawyer — Doddridge .\lley — Bound Boys — The Estray Pound — Politics in 1842 — Whig Barbecue of 1844 — Overland Trip to Oregon — Old-Time Debating Society — Anti-Masonic Movement — A Civil War Debate — Early Greensburg Libraries — Orthogra- phic Contests — Lincoln in Greensburg — First Sunday School in County — Decatur County's Only Lynching — The Agaphone — Pioneer Cold Storage — A Gunpowder Plot — To "Buss" or not to "Buss" — "Aunt Jane" Warriner's Well — A Two-Dollar Prayer — Center of Population — Dripping Springs Garden. HISTORICAL INDEX A Abolitionism 399 Adams Baptist Church 234 Adams Christian Church 263 Adams M. E. Church 224 Adams Township^ Boundaries of 95 County Seat Hopes 97 First Postoffice 98 First Settlers 96 Adams Village 104 African Methodist Church 220 Agricultural Society 385 Agricultural Statistics 384 Agriculture , — 379 Alert 132 Alert State Bank 301 Anti-Masonic Movement 526 Anti-"Spooning" Club 531 Apostrophe to Newspaper 365 Artillery and Rifle Companies 427 Athenaeum, The 340 Attorneys of Decatur County 283 "Aunt Jane" Warriner's Well 532 Authors and Poets of Decatur Co.,. 479 B Bachelors' Club 520 Band Tournament 518 Banks and Banking 298 Baptist Churches 228 Battle of Fallen Timbers 34 Battle of Tippecanoe 33 Beginning of Law and Order 75 Bench and Bar of Decatur Co 278 Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks 325 "Blazed Trails" 390 Board of Justices 88 Bound Boys 522 Burney 118 Burney State Bank _— _ 302 Butler College. Beginning of 259 C Catholic Churches 272 Cattle Feeding 381 Cecilians, The 338 Census of Indiana 59 Census Statistics 508 Centenary Methodist Church 214 Center of Population 533 Christian Churches 257 Christian (New Light) Church 269 Christian Science Society 270 Church of God 269 Churches of Decatur County 204 Circuit Court Judges 279 Citizens National Bank of Greens- burg 298 Citizens of Distinction 513 City of Greensburg 155 Civil War 420 Civil War Debate 527 Ci\il War Riot in Greensburg 442 Civil War Roll of Honor 447 Civil War Statistics 444 Clark, Gen. George Rogers 37 Clarksburg 129 Clarksburg Christian Church 261 Clarksburg M. E. Church 222 ' Clarksburg Presbyterian Church 253 Clarksburg State Bank 301 Clay Township — Buck Run 113 Burney 118 Churches 116 Cliffy Settlement 113 Duck Creek 115 HISTORICAL INDEX. Clay Township — Manufactories 116 Middlefork Settlement 114 Milford 116 Schools 115 \'illage of Needmore 113 Wyncoop 119 Clifty 113 Clinton Township — Boundaries 137 County Farm 140 Early Mills 138 Sandusky 139 Settlement of 137 Timber Industry 139 Williamstown 140 Commissioners, Early Acts of 87 Conductors of "Underground Rail- road" 399 Consolidated Schools 195 Constitution. Changes in 52 Counties, Organization of 51 County Agents 382 County Agricultural Society 385 County Auditors 90 County Clerks 90 County Colonization Society 398 County Fairs 388 County Farm 140 County Officers 87 County Organization 69 Count}' Recorders 90 County Seat 155 County Seminary 185 County Sheriffs : 89 County Treasurers 89 County's Losses in Civil War 431 Court House History 11 Courts of Decatur County 278 Cumback, Will, and Other Poets— 479 D "Dare-to-do-Right Club 510 Daughters of the American Revo- lution 461 Decatur County in Civil War 420 Decatur County's Creation 73 Distilleries 101 Distinguished Citizens of County — 513 "Donnell Rescue Case" 400 Downeyville 105 Dripping Springs Garden 533 Dry Fork Baptist Church 241 E Early Elections in County 470 Early Greensburg Libraries 527 Early Mail Facilities 98 Early Ministerial Experiences 219 Early Murder Trials 280 Early Rural Schools 182 Early Settlement of County 69 Eccentric Pioneer 521 Editorial Difficulties 366 Education in Decatur Coiinty 182 Educational System of Indiana 61 Edward Eggleston 504 Eighty-third Regiment 455 Election in Civil War 476 Elections, First in County 74, 76 Episcopal Church 268 Estray Pound 524 F Farmers Club of Springhill 385 Farmers Institute 386 Fifty-second Regiment 453 First County Election 74, 473 First Free School 187 First General Election 76 First Highway Petition 390 First Lawyer in Greensburg 521 First National Bank Failure 305 First Presidential Election 472 First Railroad in County 393 First Sunday School in County 529 First Threshing Machine 379 First Township Elections 474 First White Men in Territory ii Forest Hill 132 Fortnightly Club 336 Fredonia United Brethren Church 266 French and Indian War 35 Fugit Township — Boundaries 119 Churches 128 Clarksburg 129 HISTORICAL INDEX. Fugit Township — Early Schools 125 Kingston 128 Land Entries 122 Settlement of 120 Spring Hill 129 St. Maurice 129 When Laid Out 119 Fugitive Slave Law 406 G Geology of Decatur County 63 German Lutheran Church 268-270 German M. E. Church 270 Germans and German Influence 464 Government, Representative Stage of 42 Governors of Indiana 58 Graded Schools 187 Grand .A.rmy of the Republic 455 Greensburg — Associated Charities 173 Business Directory 161 Business Men's Association 169 Chautauqua 171 City Hall 160 City Officers 181 Comtnercial Club 167 Early Growth 157 Fire Department 159 Improvement Association 166 Incorporation 158 Location of County Seat 156 Merchants in 1844 157 Municipal StateiVient 180 Newspapers 367 Original Plat 155 Police Department 159 Postoffice 174 Prices for First Lots 156 Public Library 176 Queer Regulations 158 Sewerage System 161 Song of an Inland Town 155 Street Paving 160 Union Depot 395 Water Works 160 Young Men's Christian Ass'n 177 Greensburg B. and L. Association— 302 Greensburg Baptist Churches 237 Greensburg Christian Church 258 Greensburg Department Club 329 Greensburg National Bank 300 Greensburg Presbyterian Church 250 Greensburg Regimental Band 428 Greensburg's Foremost Citizen 290 Gunpowder Plot 531 H Harris 148 Haymakers' Association 326 Home-made Apparel 99 Hospitals for Insane 61 I Immaculate Conception Parish 274 Improved Order of Red Men 324 Independent Order of Odd Fellows 319 Indian Lands 50 Indian Struggles 41 Indiana, Boundary of 47 Indiana Capital, Changes in 54 Indiana Territory 44 Industries of Decatur County 497 Iroquois Indians Hostile 34 J Jackson Township — Alert 132 Early Settlement 131 Forest Hill 132 Present Officers 131 Primitive Schools 131 Sardinia 133 Waynesburg 132 When Established 130 Jail History 83 Justices, Board of 88 K Kappa Kappa Kappa 331 Kingston 128 Knights of Pythias 315 Knights of St. John 328 Knights of the Golden Circle 407 HISTORICAL INDEX. L Land Surveys, Present System of 39 La Salle's Explorations 33 Lawyers of an Early Day 283 Legislative Council 48 Legislature, First Territorial 43 Letts 147 Liberty Baptist Church 235 Lincoln in Greensburg 528 Liquor Question in 1847 510 Literary Club of 1914 337 Literary Glimpses 479 Little Flat Rock Baptist Church— 234 Local Option Election 511 Lone Tree Chapter, D. A. R 462 Long Overland Trip 525 Lower Union L'nited Brethren Church 267 Loyal Order of Moose 327 Lynching in 1879 . 529 M Mails, Early 98 Mapleton United Brethren Church- 266 Marion Township — Churches and Schools 134 Millhousen 135 Settlement of 134 Other Villages-—,^ 136 Married Ladies' Musicale 338 Masonic Order in Decatur County. 307 Medical Profession 341 Medical Society 363 Methodism in Greensburg 209 Methodist Episcopal Churches 208 Methodist Protestant Church 215 Mexican War 419 Middle Branch M. E. Church 227 Milford 116 Milford M. E. Church 225 Military History of Indiana 55 Military Record 408 Millhousen 135 Modern Woodmen of America 322 Morgan's Raid 439 Morgan's Raiders Defied 407 Mother's Circle 333 Mt. Aerie Baptist Cluirch 244 Mt. Carmel M. E. Church 222 Mt. Moriah Baptist Church 233 Mt. Pleasant Baptist Church 241 Mt. Pleasant Church 223 Mowrey Chapel : 262 N Natural Resources of Indiana 60 Naturalized Citizens of County 466 New Pennington M. E. Church 228 Newpoint 141 Newpoint Christian Church 264 Newpoint M. E. Church 227 Newpoint State Bank 302 Newspapers of Decatur County 365 Ninetieth Regiment : 455 Normal Schools 189 Northwest Territory. Census of 44 Noted Robbery Conspiracy 505 o Odd Fellows' Home 515 Officers in Civil War 420 Official Roster 87 Ohio Company, The 35 Old County Seminary 517 Old-Time Debating Society 526 One Hundred and Forty-Sixth Regi- ment 439 One Hundred and Thirty-fourth Regiment 438 One Hundred and Twenty-third Regiment 438 Opposition to Slavery 398 Opticians 364 Order of the Eastern Star 313 Ordinance of 1787 39 Organization of Northwest Terri- tory 42 Organization of the County 69 Organization of Townships 124 Orthographic Contests 528 P Pap Thomas Post. G. A. R 455 Patrons of Husbandry 387 Pension Board ., 364 HISTORICAL INDEX. Pentecost Church 267 Physicians of Decatur County 341 Pigeons Eclipse Sun 520 Pioneer Churches 20S Pioneer Cold Storage 530 Pioneer Industries 497 Pioneer Schools 101 Pioneer Trails and Wagon Ways 390 Poets of Decatur County 479 Political History of Indiana 57 Politics in 1842 ' 524 Pontiac's Conspiracy 36 Population Statistics 508 Presbyterian Churches 246 President Judges 278 Presidential Election of 1860 478 Primitive Conditions 98 Private Schools 187 Progress Club 334 Q Quebec Act. The 36 R Railroad Statistics 396 Railroads of Decatur County 393 Rattlesnakes Abundant 100 Record for Office-holding 519 Red Ribbon Club 510 Relief for Soldiers' Families 445 Religion 206 Religious Revival in 1869-70 518 Representatives 92 Research Club 336 Revolutionary Period 36 Revolutionary W^ar Veterans 408 Roads and Transportation 390 Rock Creek Baptist Church 245 Rockville. First Town in County — 106 Rossburg Baptist Church 242 S St. Clair's Defeat 34 St. John's Parish at Enochsburg — 275 St. Maurice 129 St. Maurice's Parish 273 St. Omer— Aspirations Blasted 104 Churches 103 First Building 102 Missed by Railroad 102 Schools 103 St. Paul— "Big John" 112 Churches and Schools 108 Disastrous Fires 111 I'Wst Mill in County 107 First Paul Cabin 107 Founder of 106 Industries and Commerce 109 Railroad Booms Town 107 St. Paul Bank 301 St. Paul Christian Church 264 St. Paul M. E. Church 225 St. Paul Schools 1 201 St. Paul's Catholic Church 275 Salem Baptist Church 237 Salt Creek Township — Boundaries 140 Last Laid Out 140 Newpoint 141 Present Officers 141 Settlement of 141 Smith's Crossing 143 Villages of 143 Sand Creek Baptist Church 229 Sand Creek Township — Boundaries of 143 First Settlers 144 Harris 148 Letts 147 Present Officers 145 Sardinia Crossing 150 Westport 145 Sandusky 139 Sandusky M. E. Church 221 Sardinia 133 Sardinia Presbyterian Clnirch 253 Sardinia L^nited Brethren Church.. 267 Schools of Greensburg 192 Schools of the Pioneers 101 Secret Societies and Fraternities... 307 Senators, State 91 Sent Bill for Prayer 532 Settlement of the County 69 Seventh Regiment 424 HISTORICAL INDEX. Seventy-sixth Regiment 436 Sheriffs, 89 Sidelights on History of County 504 Sixty-eighth Regiment 436 Slavery, Rejected in Indiana 50 Slaves Held in Decatur County 407 Smith's Crossing 143 Social and Literary Clubs 329 Soil of Decatur County 64 Soldiers of Civil War 424 Soldiers of the Revolution 408 Soldiers of War of 1812 411 Soldiers of War With Mexico 419 Spelling "Bees" 528 Spring Hill 129 Spring Hill Community Church 256 Squatters 96 State Politics at Early Date 470 State Pride 62 State Representatives 92 State Senators 91 Stock Breeders 380 Supervision of Schools 191 T Tax Payers in 1862 507 Teachers' Gatherings 188 Teachers. Qualifications of 184 Tecumseh ^^ Temperance Movement 509 Territorial Delegates to Congress-- 49 Territorial Government 46 "The Hoosier Schoolmaster" 504 Third National Bank of Greensburg 299 Thirty-seventh Regiment 433 Tomato-growing Industry 382 Topography of Decatur County 63 Tourists' Club 335 Towns and Townships 95 Township Schools 195 Townships and Towns 95 Trained Nurses 363 Treaty of Paris iS Tree on Court House Tower 81 Turnpikes 391 U "Underground Railroad" 398 Union Baptist Church 245 Union Trust Company of Greens- burg 303 United Brethren in Christ 265 United Presbj'terian Church 254 V ^'i^cennes, Capture of 37 \'incennes. Oldest Indiana Settle- nient 38 ■W War of 1812 . 411 War-Time Convention 441 Washington Township — Boundaries 150 Center of County 151 First Settlers 152 McCoy 154 Present Officers 154 Quarry Switch 154 \\'ashingtonian Organization 509 Water Transportation 392 \\'ayne. Gen. .\nthony 34 U'aynesburg 132 Waynesburg Christian Church 264 Waynesburg Farmers' Club . 385 Wesley Chapel 220 Westport 145 Westport Baptist Church 241 Westport Christian Church 262 Westport High School 199 Westport National Bank 301 Whig Barbecue of 1844 52S Wild Game 101 Williamstown 140 Wolves Troublesome 100 Woman's Christian Temperance Union 511 W^oman's Club 335 \\'oman's Relief Corps 458 Workingmen's B. and L. .\ss'n 304 BIOGRAPHICAL INDEX A Ainsworth, Charles I. 688 Alexander, Claj' 952 Alexander, Frank S. 1109 Alexander, John H., M. D. 632 Alley, Jonathan L. 1008 Allison, Francis M. 747 Anderson, Hamlin 1160 Anderson, Nicholas 1143 Anderson, Robert 1067 Angle, William M. , 752 Annis, James X. 693 Apple, Solomon 1045 Ardery, David A. 572 Armstrong, Alfred M. 842 Armstrong, Francis D. 856 Askin, Cliflford G. 943 Aultman, Henry M. 575 B Ballard, Daniel J., M. D. 756 Ballard, Harry W. 1207 ' Beck, John W. 703 Bentley, Alexander 1126 Black, Jacob 1162 Black, John C. 1071 Blackamore, David M. 552 Blackmore, Lawrence O. (deceased) 1010 Blackmore, Lawrence O. 1015 Blankman. Bernard H. 728 Blankman, Henry 1196 Boicourt, William T. 1042 Boling, Albert 800 Boling, George W. 771 Boling, Walter T. 767 Bonner, Judge Samuel A. 851 Bonner, Walter W. 734 Bostic, James M. 1111 Bostic, Watson 983 Bowman, Henry C. 806 Boyd, Harry 543 Bracken, John Locke 544 Braden. Luther D. 618 Braden, Richard J. 587 Bruns, Benedict 906 Buckley, Daniel ^ 914 Burney, John W. 799 Bush, James N. 773 Bussell, Smith B. 741 Byers, James M. 999 C Carman, Ira C. 986 Clark, Ira 711 Clark, Samuel 894 Cline, James 978 Cobb, Jasper 640 Collicott, Rev. John 1029 Collins, John R. 885 Cory, Joseph 792 Cory, Walter B. 615 Corya, John W. 1018 Crawford, George S., M. D. 784 Crisler, Will J. 547 Crist. Scott F. 1204 Cuskaden, John T. 789 D Davis, Daniel 695 Davis, Edward W. 880 Davis, James B. 782 Davis, James G. 992 Davis, Robert J. 1098 Davis, William 1014 Day, Thomas E. 1031 Deem. John W. 709 DeMoss, John W. _•_ 824 Denham, Benjamin F. 1123 Deniston, John H. 1194 Deniston, William H. 1117 I BIOGRAPHICAL INDEX. Deupree, Clarence C. 1174 Deupree, Everett L. 1037 Deupree. Thomas M. 1175 Dietrich, Otto F. 779 Donnell, Edwin D. 1079 Douglas, Dilver £., M. D. 930 Draping. Henry A. 974 Dufifey, Thomas 642 Eckhart, Leroy A. 1075 Eddelman. Edgar 1119 Elder, Oliver C. 698 Elliott. Daniel W. 1138 Elliott. Marion M. 1131 Elliott. Theodore 993 Emniert, Harry 730 Emmert, Jacob 749 Emmert, Len J. 550 Erdmann. George E. 559 Evans. John G. 960 Evans, Milton E. 1133 Fear. John 1085 Fear, William S. 1097 Fee. Edwin S. 933 Foley, Gen. James B. 568 Foley, John J. 560 Ford, Lafayette 597 Fry, Henry 831 Fulton, Samuel D. 1129 H Habig, Anthony 121 Hahn, Valentine 920 Hamilton. Chester 1170 Hamilton, Everett 610 Hamilton. Frank 656 Hamilton, James F. 738 Hamilton, Luther D. . 1183 Hamilton, R. Ray 941 Hamilton, Robert C. 570 Hamilton, Thomas E. 878 Hamilton, Thomas M. 907 Hanks, Samuel B. 991 Harding, James L. 864 Harrod, Cecil G., M. D. 984 Harwood. Cyrus D. 759 Hays. John C. 948 Heger, Michael 821 Hess. George L. 1210 Hill, Clarence L. 1156 Hillis, Alexander 975 Hite, Edgar E. 818 Hitt, Sherman B., M. D. 596 Hoeing, Bernard A. ■ 918 Holcomb, Daniel Wesley 912 Holcomb, John W. 840 Holmes. Mrs. Dorcas E. (McLain).. 581 Holmes. Webster H. 950 Hopkins. Harry S., D. D. S 1047 Howard. James 1017 Hudson, Millard A. 690 Hughes, Jason B. 696 Hungerford. W^alter 874 Hunter, John 1004 I Isgrigg, William H. 814 Galbraith. Francis I. 1215 Garrison. Joseph W. 608 Gartin, John G. 1088 Gaston, J. Minor 936 Gibson, Estill A. 1012 Glass, Jacob C, M. D. 834 Goddard, William 661 Greeley, Clarence E. 797 Grover. Dr. Charles B. 816 Guthrie, John G. 924 Jackson, Edward A. 988 Jackson, Samuel L. 636 Jackson. William E. 1034 Jameson, Barton W. 1137 Jenkins. Myron C. 1164 Jewell. Allen 1001 Jewett, Israel D. 1053 Jewett. Lorin A. 1059 lohannigmann, Mathias 931 BIOGRAPHICAL INDEX. Johnson, John 788 Jones, Clifford F. 677 K Kanouse, John R. 774 Kelly, Samuel 1145 Kennedy, Simeon H. 1198 Kercheval, Clarence F., M. D, 562 Kercheval, James T. 862 Kessing, Edward 1200 Ketchum, Francis G, 1191 Ketchum, William S, 1064 Kincaid, Gilbert G, 662 Kirby, Henry C. 1077 Kitchin, Guy E. 626 Kitchin, Joseph B. 826 Kitchin, Thomas J. 639 L Lathrop, Harry 910 Lathrop, James B, 724 Lawson, William A. 1000 Layton, Jephtha 977 Lee, Orlando 1052 Link, Albert 964 Littell, Mrs. Benjamin F, 1028 Littell, George S. 539 Littell, Sam V. 699 Logan, Aaron 1203 Logan, Aaron L. 686 Logan, George A. 889 Logan, Henry R. 832 Logan, John 844 Logan, John H. 765 Logan, Will W. 859 Lowe, Arthur J. 584 Lowe, Edward C. 674 Mc McCoy, Curtis 904 McCoy, Sutherland 592 McCoy, William M. 604 McCracken, Hugh T. 634 McKee, Harley S., M. D. 902 McLaughlin, James C. 648 M Manlief. Omer T. 884 Meek, Adam 658 Meek, George M. 763 Meek, John T. 1185 Meek, Robert S. 576 Menzie, George 721 Messier, Cornelius 714 Metz, George W. 846 Metz, John }L 624 Miers, Morgan L. 760 Miers, VVillard A. 981 Miers, William H. 946 Miller, Charles P. 1166 Minor, Joseph S. 966 Mires, John A. 1006 Mobley, William H. 794 Moenkedick, Joseph 980 Moor, George W. 1082 Moore, Huber C. 804 Morrison, Clyde C, M. D. 1211 Mount, Harry H. 716 Mowrey, Nelson 732 Mozingo, Henry 972 Mulford, Fred E. 876 Mulroy, Anthony B. 780 Myers, Judge David A. 1213 Myers, George M. 1101 Myers, James A. 646 Myers, John T. 1003 N Xesbitt, Charles M. 1187 O Oldham, Eber J. 916 Ortman, Bernard 901 Osborn, John E. 768 Owen, John S. 1140 P Patterson, Joseph 603 Pavy, John T. 776 Perry. Dan S 606 Perry, George S. 823 n BIOGli.\PHICAL INDEX. Pleak. Ezra L. 1056 Pleak, Strauther Van 1170 Porter, Alexander 1152 Porter, Edward A., M.D. 1105 Porter, James 654 Power, Ernest D. 682 Powner, James L. , 995 Powner, John C. 685 Pulse, William C. 612 Pumphrey, Cyrus W. 1026 Pumphrey, Edward 1022 Pumphrey, Francis M. 956 Pumphrey, James A. 1021 Puttmann, John J. 898 R Redelman, George F. 888 Redelman, Henry M. 958 Reed, George N. 678 Reniy, Charles E. 953 Riley, Eden T., M. D. 557 Riley, Hon. Zachariah T. 1039 Risk, Charles F. 1073 Robbins, Charles C. 1157 Robbins, John E. 1120 Robbins, John E. 535 Robertson, John F. 1103 Robertson, Josiah W. 967 Robertson, Lafayette 1062 Robertson, William W. 1050 Robison, James B. 704 Ruhl. Max 812 Russell, Albert C. 579 Russell, John F. 554 S Sands, Linton W. 670 Scheidler, George M. 820 Schroeder, John H. 882 Scott. Robert 629 Scott, Walter 629 Sefton, George W. 705 Shafer, James H. 1146 Shafer, Wilson M. L 854 Shaw, Col. Benjamin C. 997 Shaw, John J, 1134 Shaw, Thomas N. 754 Shera, Isaac 848 Shortridge, James M. 786 Shuperd, George W. 1065 Smalley, Reuben 701 Smiley, Thomas K. 736 Smiley, William 650 Smiley, William F. 620 Smiley, William G. 668 Smith, William S. 564 Spears, John W. 1024 Stark, Randolph 891 Stevenson, Thomas H. 644 Stewart, Samuel H. 718 Stott & Company, W. T. 745 Stott, 'Richard T. 802 Stout, Frank C. 647 Styers, Jesse H. 836 Styers, William G. . 1094 T Talbott, Abram PI. 672 Taylor, Albert G. 1061 Taylor, Isaac H. 940 Taylor, John W^ 1072 Templeton, Charles S. 1048 Templeton, Nelson M. 652 Thomson, Henry 707 Throp, James B. 808 Throp, Wesley 810 Thurston, Jacob L. 1141 Townsend. Henry 1107 Travis, Louis O. 1206 Tremain, John \Vt 1115 Trimble, Oscar B. 928 Turner, Rev. James W., A. M., D. D. 969 Turner. R.dlin A. 600 U Updike, William G. 743 Urich, Rev. John A. 720 V Van Pleak, Strauther 1170 Venner, Abram F. 1086 W Waits. Isaac D. ..1068 Walker, Elmer E. -'. 922 BIOGRAPHICAL INDEX. WalHngford, John N. 617 Weadon, Frank M. 926 Weadon, George A. 1190 Welch, Oliver F., M. D. 1192 Welsh, Glanton G. 664 White, Isaac W. 692 Willey, Andrew S. 680 Williams, Andrew 1113 Williams, Richard A. 1178 Willoughby, Andrew M. 566 Wood, James M., M.D. 1083 Wooden, Elmer E. 588 Woodfill, William C. 622 Woodfill, William S. 627 Woodruff, John H. 1100 Woodward. Charles W. 594 Worland, Charles W. 896 Wright, Caleb S. 1148 Wright, Londa 791 Wright. Wilbur B. 1168 Wynkoop, Isaac N. 1092 Z Zoller, Charles 583 HISTORICAL CHAPTER I. RELATED STATE HISTORY. The first white men to set foot upon the Northwest Territory were J'rench traders and missionaries under the leadership of La Salle. This was about the year 1670 and subsequent discoveries and explorations in this region by the French' gave that nation practically undisputed possession of all the territory organized in 1787 as the Northwest Territory. It is true that the English colonies of Virginia, Connecticut and Massachusetts claimed that their charters extended their grants westward to the Mississippi river. However, Erance claimed this territory and successfully maintained posses- sion of it until the close of the Erench and Indian War in 1763. At that time the treaty of Paris transferred all of the French claims east of the Mississippi river to England, as well as all claims of France to territory on the mainland of North America. For the next twenty years the Northwest Territory was under the undisputed control of England, but became a part of the United States by the treaty which terminated the Revolutionary War in 1783. Thus the flags of three nations have floated over the territory now comprehended within the present state of Indiana — the tri-color of France, the union jack of England and the stars and stripes of the United States. History will record the fact that there was another nation, however, which claimed possession of this territory and, while the Indians can hardly be called a nation, yet they made a gallant fight to retain their hunting grounds. The real owners of this territory struggled against heavy odds to maintain their supremacy and it was not until the battle of Tippecanoe, in the fall of iSii, that the Indians gave up the unequal struggle. Tecumseh, the Washington of his race, fought fiercely to save this territory for his people, but the white man finally overwhelmed him, and "Lo, the poor Indian" was pushed westward across the Mississippi. The history of the Northwest (3) 34 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Territory is full of the bitter fights which tlie Indians waged in trying to drive the Avhite man out and the defeat which the Indians inflicted on general St. Clair on November 4, 1792, will go down in the annals of American history as the worst defeat \\hich an American army ever suffered at the hands of the Indians. The greatest battle which has ever been fought in the United States against the Indians occurred in the state of Ohio. This was the battle of Fallen Timbers and occurred August 20, 1794, the scene of the battle being within the present county of Defiance. After the close of the Revolutionar}- War the Indians, urged on by the British, caused the settlers in the Northwest Territory continued trouble and defeated every de- tachment sent against them previous to their defeat b}- Gen. Anthony \Vayne at the battle of Fallen Timbers in 1794. Although there was some trouble w itli the Indians after this time, they never offered serious resistance after this memorable defeat until the fall of 181 1. when Gen. William Henry Har- rison completely routed them at the battle of Tippecanoe. TERRITORY NORTHWEST OF THE OHIO (167O-I754). Ohio was the first state created out of the old Northwest Territory, although Indiana had been previously organized as a territory. When the land comprehended within the Northwest Territory was discovered by the French under La Salle about 1670, it was a battle ground of various Indian triljes. although tlie Fries, who were located along the shores of Lake Erie, were the only ones with a more or less definite territory. From 1670 to 1763, the close of the French and Indian War, the French were in pos.session of this territory and established their claims in a positive manner by exten- sive exploration and scattered settlements. The chief centers of French settlement were at Detroit, Vincennes, Kaskaskia, Cahokia, Fort Crevecour and at se\-eral missionary stations around the shores of the great lakes. The French did not succeed in doing this without incurring the hostility of the Iroquois Indians, a bitter enmity w'hich was brought about chieflv because the French helped the Shawnees, Wyandots and Miamis to dri\-e the Iroquois out of the territory west of the Muskingum river in Ohio. It must not be forgotten that the English also laid claim to the North- west Territory, basing their claim on the discoveries of the Cabots and the subsequent charters of Virginia, Massachusetts and Connecticut. These charters extended the limits of these three colonies westward to the Pacific ocean, although, as a matter of fact, none of the three colonies made a settle- ment west of the Alleghanies until after the Revolutionary War. New York DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 35 sought to Strengthen her claim to territory west of the Alleghanies in 1701, by getting from the Iroquois, the bitter enemies of the French, a grant to the territory from which the French and their Indian aUies had previously ex- pelled them. Although this grant was renewed in 1726 and again confirmed in 1744, it gave New York only a nominal claim and one which was never recognized by the French in any way. English traders from Pennsylvania and Virginia began in 1730 to pay more attention to the claims of their country west of the Alleghanies and north of the Ohio river. When their activities reached the ears of the French the governor of French Canada sent Celeron de Bienville up and down the Ohio and the rivers and streams running into it from the north and took formal possession of the territory by planting lead plates at the mouth of e\'ery river and stream of any importance. This peculiar method of the French in seeking to establish their claims occurred in the year 1749 and opened the eyes of England to the necessity of taking some immediate action. George II, the king of England at the time, at once granted a charter for the first Ohio Company (there were two others by the same name later organ- ized), composed of London merchants and enterprising Virginians, and the company at once proceeded to formulate plans to secure possession of the ter- ritory north of the Ohio and west of the INIississippi. Christopher Gist was sent down the Ohio river in 1750 to explore the country as far west as the mouth of the Scioto river, and made several treaties with the Indians. Things were now rapidly approaching a crisis and it was soon evident that there would be a struggle of arms between England and France for the disputed region. In 1754 the English started to build a fort at the confluence of the Monongahela and Allegheny rivers, on the site of the present city of Pitts- burgh, but before the fort was completed the French appeared on the scene, drove the English awav and finished the fort which had been begun. 'to' FRENCH AND INDIAN WAR (1754-63). The crisis had finally come. The struggle which followed between the two nations ultimately resulted in the expulsion of the French from the mainland of America as well as from the immediate territory in dispute. The war is known in America as the French and Indian War and in the history of the world as the Seven Years' War, the latter designation being due to the fact that it lasted that length of time. The struggle developed into a world-wide conflict and the two nations fought over three continents, America, Europe and Asia. It it not within the province of this resume of 36 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. the history of Indiana to go into the details of this memorable struggle. It is sufficient for the purpose at hand to state that the treaty of Paris, which terminated the war in 1763, left France without any of her former posses- sions on the mainland of America. PONTIAC'S CONSPIRACY ( 1 763-64). With the English in control of America east of the Mississippi river and the French regime forever ended, the Indians next command the attention of the historian who deals with the Northwest Territory. The French were undoubtedly responsible for stirring up their former Indian allies and Pontiac's conspiracy must be credited to the influence of that nation. This formidable uprising was successfully overthrown by Henry Bouquet, who led an expedition in 1764 into the present state of Ohio and compelled the Wyandots, Delawares and Shawnees to sue for peace. NORTHV/EST TERRITORY AND QUEBEC ACT. From 1764 to 1774, no events of particular importance occurred within the territory north of the Ohio river, but in the latter year (June 22, 1774), England, then at the breaking point with the colonies, passed the Quebec act, which attached this territory to the province of Quebec for administrative purposes. This intensified the feeling of resentment which the colonies bore against their mother country and is given specific mention in their list of grievances which they enumerated in their Declaration of Independence. The Revolutionary War came on at once and this act, of course, was never put into execution. REVOLUTIONARY PERIOD (1775-83). During the War for Independence (1775-1783), the various states with claims to western lands agreed with the Continental Congress to surrender their claims to the national government. In fact, the Articles of Confedera- tion were not signed until all of the states had agreed to do this and Mary- land withheld her assent to the articles until March i, 1780, on this account. In accordance with this agreement New York ceded her claim to the United States in 1780, Virginia in 1784, Massachusetts in 1785 and Connecticut in 1786, although the latter state excepted a one-hundred-and-twenty-mile strip of three million five hundred thousand acres bordering on Lake Erie. This DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 37 strip was formally relinciuished in 1800, with the understanding that the United States would guarantee the titles already issued by that state. Vir- ginia was also allowed a reservation, known as the Virginia Military Dis- trict, which lay between the Little Miami and Scioto rivers, the same being for distribution among her Revolutionary veterans. There is one other fact which should be mentioned in connection with the territory north of the Ohio in the Revolutionary period. This was the memorable conquest of the territory bv Gen. George Rogers Clark. During the years 1778 and 1779, this redoubtable leader captured Kaskaskia, Cahokia and Vincennes and thereby drove the English out of the Northwest Territory. It is probable that this notable campaign secured this territory for the Americans and that without it we would not have had it included in our possessions in the treaty which closed the Revolutionary War. CAPTURE OF VINCENNES. One of the most interesting pages of Indiana history is concerned with the capture of Vincennes by Gen. George Rogers Clark in the spring of 1779. The expedition of this intrepid leader with its successful results marked him as a man of more than usual ability. Prompted by a desire to secure the territory northwest of the Ohio river for the Americans, he sought and ob- tained permission from the governor of Virginia the right to raise a body of troops for this purpose. Early in the spring of 1778 Clark began collecting his men for the proposed expedition. Within a short time he collected about one hundred and fifty men at Fort Pitt and floated down the Ohio to the falls near Jeffersonville. He picked up a few recruits at this place and in June floated on down the river to the mouth of the Tennessee river. His original intention was to make a descent on Vincennes first, but, having re- ceived erroneous reports as to the strength of the garrison located there, he decided to commence active operations at Kaskaskia. After landing his troops near the mouth of the Tennessee in the latter part of June, 1778, he marched them across southern Illinois to Kaskaskia, arriving there on the evening of July 4. The inhabitants were terror stricken at first, but upon being assured by General Clark that they were in no danger and that all he wanted was for them to give their support to the American cause, their fears were soon quieted. Being so far from the scene of the war, the French along the Mississippi knew little or nothing about its progress. One of the most important factors in establishing a friendly relation between the Amer- icans and the French inhabitants was the hearty willingness of Father Gibault, 38 DECATUK COUNTY, INDIANA. the Catholic priest stationed at Kaskaskia, in making his people see that their best interests would be served by aligning themselves with the Americans. Father Gibault not only was of invaluable assistance to General Clark at Kaskaskia, but he also ofifered to make the overland trip to A'incennes and win over the French in that place to the American side. This he successfully did and returned to Kaskaskia in August with the welcome news that the inhabitants of Vincennes were willing to give their allegiance to the Americans. However, before Clark got his troops together for the trip to Vincennes, General Flamilton, the lieutenant-governor of Detroit, descended the \Vabash and captured Vincennes (December 15, 1778). At that time Clark had only two men stationed there, Leonard Helm, who was in command of the fort, and a private by the name of Henry. As soon as Clark heard that the British had captured \"incennes, he began to make plans for retaking it. The terms of enlistment of many of his men had expired and he had difficulty in getting enough of them to re-enlist to make a body large enough to make a successful attack. A number of young Frenchmen joined his command and finally, in January, 1779, Clark set out from Kaskaskia for Vincennes with one hundred and seventy men. This trip of one hundred sixty miles was made at a time when traveling overland was at its worst. The prairies were wet, the streams were swollen and the rivers overflowing their banks. Notwithstand- ing the difficulties which confronted him and his men, Clark advanced rapidlv as possible and by February 23, 1779, he was in front of Vincennes. Two days later, after considerable parleying and after the fort had suffered from a murderous fire from the Americans, General Hamilton agreed to surrender. This marked the end of British dominion in Indiana and ever since that day the territory now comprehended in the state has been American soil. VINCENNES, THE OLDEST SETTLEMENT OF INDIANA. Historians have never agreed as to the date of the founding of Vin- cennes. The local historians of that city have always claimed that the settlement of the town dates from 1702, although those who have examined all the facts and documents have come to the conclusion that 1732 comes nearer to being the correct date. It was in the latter year that George Wash- ington was born, a fact which impresses upon the reader something of the age of the city. Vincennes was an old town and had seen several generations pass away when the Declaration of Independence was signed. It was in Vincennes and vicinity that the best blood of the Northwest Territory was DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 39 found at the time of the Revohitionary War. It was made the seat of justice of Knox county when it was organized in 1790 and consequently it is by many years the oldest county seat in the state. It became the first capital of Indiana Territory in 1800 and saw it removed to Corydon in 181 3 for the reason, so the Legislature said, that it was too near the outskirts of civiliza- tion. In this oldest city of the Mississippi valley still stands the house into which Governor Harrison moved in 1804, and the house in which the Terri- torial Legislature held its sessions in 1805 is still in an excellent state of '-s preservation. Today Vincennes is a thriving city of fifteen thousand, with paved streets, street cars, fine public buildings and public utility plants equal to any in the state. It is the seat of a university which dates back more than a century. FIRST SURVEYS AND EARLY SETTLERS. The next period in the history of the territory north of the Ohio begins with the passage of a congressional act (May 20, 1785), which provided for the present system of land surveys into townships six miles square. As soon as this was put into operation, settlers — and mostly Revolutionary soldiers — began to pour into the newly surxeyed territory. A second Ohio Company was organized in the spring of 1786, made up chiefly of Revolutionary officers and soldiers from New England, and this company proposed to estab- lish a state somewhere between Lake Erie and the Ohio river. At this junc- ture Congress realized that definite steps should be made at once for some kind of government over this extensive territory, a territory which now in- cludes the present states of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Wisconsin and about a third of Minnesota. Various plans were proposed in Congress and most of the sessions of 1786 and the first half of 1787 were consumed in trying to formulate a suitable form of government for the extensive terri- tory. The result of all these deliberations resulted in the famous Ordinance of 1787, which was finally passed on July 13, 1787. ORDINANCE OF 1 787. There have been many volumes written about this instrument of gov- ernment and to this day there is a difference of opinion as to who was its author. The present article can do no more than merely sketch its outline and set forth the main provisions. It was intended to provide only a tem- porary government and to serve until such a time as the population of the 40 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. territory would warrant the creation of states with the same rights and privileges which the thirteen original states enjoyed. It stipulated that not less than three nor more than five states should ever be created out of the whole territory and the maximum number was finally organized, although it was not until 1848 that the last state, Wisconsin, was admitted to the Union. The third article, "Religion, morality and knowledge being necessary to good government and the happiness of mankind, schools and the means of educa- tion shall forever be encouraged," has given these five states the basis for their excellent system of public schools, state normals, colleges and uni- versities. Probably the most widely discussed article was the sixth, which pro- vided that slavery and involuntary servitude should never be permitted within the territory and by the use of the word "forever" made the territory free for all time. It is interesting to note in this connection that both Indiana and Illinois before their admission to the Union sought to have this pro- vision set aside, but every petition from the two states was refused by Con- gress in accordance with the provision of the Ordinance. FIRST STAGE OF GOVERNMENT UNDER THE ORDINANCE. The ordinance contemplated two grades of territorial government. During the operation of the first grade of government the governor, his secre- tary and the three judges provided by the ordinance were to be appointed by Congress and the governor in turn was to appoint "such magistrates and other civil officers in each county and township as he shall deem necessary for the preservation of the peace and good will of the same." After the federal government was organized a statutory provision took the appoint- ment of these oflicers out of the hands of Congress and placed it in the hands of the President of the United States. All executive authority was given to the governor, all judicial authority to the three judges, while the governor and iudges, in joint session, constituted the legislative body. This means that during the first stage of territorial government the people had absolutely no voice in the affairs of government and this state of affairs lasted until 1799, a period of twelve years. SECOND STAGE OF GOVERNMENT UNDER THE ORDINANCE. The second stage of government in the territory was to begin whenever the governor was satisfied that there were at least five thousand free male inhabitants of the age of twenty-one and above. The main difference be- DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 4I tween the first and second stages of territorial government lay in the fact that the legislative functions were taken from the governor and judges and given to a "general assembly or legislature." The ordinance provided for the election of one representative for each five hundred free male inhabitants, the tenure of the office to be two years. While the members of the lower house were to be elected by the qualified voters of the territory, the upper house, to consist of five members, were to be appointed by Congress in a somewhat complicated manner. The house of representatives was to select ten men and these ten names were to be sent to Congress and out of this number five were to be selected l)y Congress. This provision, like the ap- pointment of the governor, was later changed so as to make the upper house the appointees of the President of the United States. The five men so selected were called councilors and held office for five years. INDIAN STRUGGLES (1787-1803). The period from 1787 to 1803 in the Northwest Territory was marked by several bitter conflicts with the Indians. Just as at the close of the French and Indian War had the French stirred up the Indians against the Americans, so at the close of the Revolutionary War did the English do the same. In fact the War of 1812 was undoubtedly hastened by the depredations of the Indians, who were urged to make forays upon the frontier settlements in the Northwest Territory by the British. The various uprisings of the Indians during this critical period greatly retarded the influx of settlers in the new territory, and were a constant menace to those hardy pioneers who did ven- ture to establish homes north of the Ohio river. Three distinct campaigns were waged against the savages before they were finally subdued. The first campaign was under the command of Gen. Josiah Harmar (1790) and re- sulted in a decisive defeat for the whites. The second expedition was under the leadership of Gen. Arthur St. Clair (1791), the governor of the Territory, and was marked by one of the worst defeats ever suffered by an American army at the hands of the Indians. A lack of knowledge of Indian methods of warfare, combined with reckless mismanagement, sufficiently accounts for both disasters. It remained for Gen. Anthony Wayne, the "Mad Anthony" of Revolutionary fame, to bring the Indians to terms. The battle of Fallen Timbers, which closed his campaign against the Indians, was fought August 20, 1794, on the Maumee river within the present county of Defiance county, Ohio. This crushing defeat of the Indians, a rout in which they lost twelve out of thirteen chiefs, was so complete that the Indians were glad to sue for 42 DECATUR COUNTY. INDIANA. peace. On June lo, 1795, delegates from the various Indian tribes, headed by their respective chiefs, met at Greenville, Ohio, to formulate a treaty. A treaty was finally consummated on August 3, and was signed by General Wayne on behalf of the United States and by ninety chiefs and delegates of twelve interested tribes. This treaty was faithfully kept by the Indians and ever afterwards Little Turtle, the real leader of the Indians at that time, was a true friend of the whites. While th.ere were several sporadic forays on the part of the Indians up to iSii, there was no battle of any importance with them until the liattle of Tippecanoe in the fall of 181 1. ORGANIZATION OF THE NORTHWEST TERRITORV. The first governor of the newly organized territory was Gen. Arthur St. Clair, a gallant soldier of the Revolution, who was appointed on October 5, 1787, and ordered to report for duty on the first of the following February. He held the office until November 22, 1802, when he was dismissed by Presi- dent Jefferson "for the disorganizing spirit, and tendency of every example, violating the rules of conduct enjoined by his public station, as displayed in his address to the convention." The governor's duties were performed by his secretary, Charles W. Byrd, until March i, 1803, when the state officials took their office. The first judges appointed were Samuel Holden Parsons, James Mitchell \'arnum and John Armstrong. Before the time came for the judges to qualify, Armstrong resigned and John Cleves Symmes was ap- pointed in his place. The first secretary was Wihthrop Sargent, who held the position until he was appointed governor of Mississippi Territory by the President on May 2, 1798. Sargent was succeeded by William Henry Har- rison, who was appointed by the President on June 26, 1798, and confined by the Senate two days later. Harrison was later elected as the first dele- gate of the organized Northwest Territory to Congress and the President then appointed Charles Willing Byrd as secretary of the Territory, Byrd's appointment being confirmed by the Senate on December 31, 1799. REPRESENTATIVE ST.\GE OF GOVERNMENT (1799-1803). The Northwest Territory remained under the government of the first stage until September i6, 1799, when it formally advanced to the second or representative stage. In the summer of 1798 Governor St. Clair had ascer- tained that the territory had a population of at least five thousand free male inhabitants and, in accordance with the provisions of the Ordinance of 1787, DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 43 was ready to make the change in its form of government. On October 29, 1798, the governor issued a proclamation to the quaHiied voters of the terri- tory directing them to choose members for the lower house of the territorial Legislature at an election to be held on the third Monday of the following December. The twenty-two members so elected met on January 16, 1799, and, pursuant to the provisions of the ordinance, selected the ten men from whom the President of the United States later chose five for the Legislative Council. They then adjourned to meet on September 16, 1799, but since there was not a quorum on that day they held adjourned sessions until the 23rd, at which time a quorum was present. At the time the change in the form of government went into effect there were only nine counties in the whole territory. These counties had been organized either by the governor or his secretary. The following table gives the nine counties organized before 1799 with the dates of their organization and the number of legislators proportioned to each by the governor: Date of Number of County. Organization. representatives. Washington July 27, 1788 2 Hamilton January 4, 1790 7 St. Clair April 27, 1790 ^ i Knox June 20, 1790 i Randolph October 5, 1795 i Wayne August 6, 1796 3 Adams July 10, 1797 2 Jefferson July 29, 1797 i Ross August 20, 1798 4 FIRST TERRITORIAL LEGISLATURE OF NORTHWEST TERRITORY. The twenty-two representatives and five councilors were the first rep- resentative body to meet in the Northwest Territory and they represented a constituency scattered over a territory of more than two hundred and sixty- five thousand square miles, an area greater than Germany or France, or even Austria-Hungary. It would be interesting to tell something of the delibera- tions of these twenty-seven sterling pioneers, but the limit of the present article forbids. It is necessary, however, to make mention of one important thing which they did in view of the fact that it throws much light on the subsequent history of the Northwest Territory. 44 DECATUR COUXTV, INDIANA. DIVISION OF ISOO. The Legislature was authorized to elect a delegate to Congress and two candidates for the honor presented their names to the Legislature, William Henry Harrison and Arthur St. Clair, Jr., the son of the governor. The Legislature, by a joint ballot on October 3, 1799, elected Harrison by a vote of eleven to ten. The defeat of his son undoubtedly had considerable to do with the subsequent estrangement which arose between the governor and his legislature and incidentally hastened the division of the Northwest Terri- tory. Within two years from the time the territory had advanced to the second stage of government the division had taken place. On May 7, 1800, Congress passed an act dividing the Northwest Territory by a line drawn from the mouth of the Kentucky river to Fort Recovery, in Mercer county, Ohio, and thence due north to the boundary line between the United States and Canada. Governor St. Clair favored the division because he thought it would delay the organization of a state and thus give him a longer lease on his position, but he did not favor the division as finally determined. He was constantly growing in disfavor with the people on account of his overbearing manner and he felt that he would get rid of some of his bitterest enemies if the western inhabitants were set off into a new territory. However, the most of the credit for the division must be given to Harrison, who, as a dele- gate to Congress, was in a position to have the most influence. Harrison also was satisfied that in case a new territory should be formed he would be ap- pointed its first governor and he was not disappointed. The territory west of the line abo\-e mentioned was immediately organized and designated as Indiana Territory, while the eastern portion retained the existing govern- ment and the old name — Northwest Territory. It is frequently overlooked that the Northwest Territory existed in fact and in name up until March i 1803. CENSUS OF NORTHWEST TERRITORY IN 180O. The division of iSoo left the Northwest Territory with only about one- third of its original area. The census of the territory taken by the United States government in iSoo showed it to have a total population of forty-five thousand three hundred and sixty-five, which fell short by about fifteen thou- sand of being sufficient for the creation of a state as provided by the Ordi- nance of 1787, which fixed the minimum population at sixty-thousand. The counties left in the Northwest Territory, with their respective population. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 4^ are set forth in the appended table, all of which were within the present state of Ohio, except Wayne: Adams 0.432 Hamilton 14.632 Jefferson 8,766 Ross 8,540 Trumbull 1,302 Washington 5.427 Wayne 3,206 Total 45,365 The population as classified by the census with respect to age and sex is interesting and particularly so in showing that considerably more than one- third of the total population were children under ten years of age. Males. Females. Whites up to ten years of age 9,362 8,644 Whites from ten to sixteen 3,647 3.353 Whites from sixteen to twenty-six 4,636 3,861 Whites from twenty-six to forty-five__ 4,833 3,342 Whites forty-five and upward i,955 i>395 Total 24,433 20,595 Total of both sexes 45,028 Total of other persons, not Indians 2)2>7 Grand total 45,36 .^ The above table shows in detail the character and distribution of the population of the Northwest Territory after the division of 1800. It is at this point that the history of Indiana properly begins and it is pertinent to set forth with as much detail as possible the population of Indiana Territory at that time. The population of 5,641 was grouped about a dozen or more settlements scattered at wide intervals throughout the territory. The follow- ing table gives the settlements in Indiana Territory in 1800 with their re- spective number of inhabitants: 46 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Mackinaw, in nortliern Michigan 251 Green Bay, Wisconsin 50 Prairie dii Chien, Wisconsin 65 Cahokia, Monroe county, Illinois 719 Belle Fontaine, Monroe count}', Illinois 28'6 L'Aigle, St. Clair county, Illinois 250 Kaskaskia, Randolph county, Illinois 467 Prairie du Rocher, Randolph county, Illinois 212 Settlement in Mitchel township, Randolph county, 111 334 Fort Massac, southern Illinois 90 Clark's Grant, Clark county, Indiana 929 Vincennes, Knox county, Indiana 714 Vicinity of \'incennes (traders and trappers) 819 Traders and trappers at Ouitenon and Fort Wa^-ne 155 Fur traders, scattered along the lakes 300 Of this total population of nearly six thousand, it was about equally divided between what is now Indiana and Illinois. There w-ere one hun- dred and sixty-three free negroes reported, -while there were one hundred and thirty-five slaves of color. Undoubtedly, this census of 1800 failed to give all of the slave population, and it is interesting to note that there were efforts to ensla\e the Indian as well as the negro. All of these settlements with the exception of the one in Clark's Grant were largely French. The settlement at Jeffersonville was made in large part by soldiers of the Re\-olutionary War and w-as the only real American settlement in the Indiana Territory when it was organized in 1800. FIR.ST ST.\GE OF TERRITORIAL GOVERNMENT. The government of Indiana Territory was formally organized July 4, 1800, and in a large book kept in the secretary of state's office at Indianapolis, there appears in the large legible hand of John Gibson the account of the first meeting of the officials of the Territory. It reads as follows : "St. Vincennes, July 4, 1800. This day the government of the Indiana Territory commenced, William Henry Harrison having been appointed governor, John Gibson, secretary, ^Villiam Clarke, Henry Vanderburgh & John Griffin Judges in and over said Territorv." Until Governor Harrison appeared at \'incennes. his secretary, John Gibson, acted as governor. The first territorial court met March 3, i8or, DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 47 the first meeting of the go\'crnor and judges having begun on the 12th of the preceding January. Tlie governor and judges, in accordance with the pro- visions of the Ordinance of 1787, continued to perform all legislative and judicial functions of the territory until it was ad\'anced to the representative stage of govern.nient in 1805. The governor had sole executive power and appointed all officials, territorial and county. CHANGES IN BOUNDARY LIMITS OF INDIANA, During this period from 1800 to 1805, the territory of Indiana was con- siderably augmented as result of the organization of the state of Ohio in 1S03. At that date Ohio was given its present territorial limits, and all of the rest of the Northwest Territory was included within Indiana Territory from this date until 1805. During this interim Louisiana was divided and the northern part was attached to Indiana Territory for purposes of civil and criminal jurisdiction. This was, however, only a temporary arrangement, which lasted only about a year after the purchase of Louisiana from France. The ne.xt change in the limits of Indiana Territory occurred in 1805, in which year the territory of Michigan was set of¥. The southern line of !\iichigan was made tangent to the southern extreme of Lake Michigan, and it so remained until Indiana was admitted to the Union in 181 6. From 1805 to 1809 Indiana included all of the present states of Indiana, Illinois, Wiscon- sin and about one-third of Minnesota. In the latter year Illinois was set off as a territorv and Indiana was left with its present limits with the exception of a ten-mile strip along the northern boundary. This strip was detached from Michigan and this subsequently led to friction between the two states, which was not settled until the United States government gave ■Michigan a large tract of land west of Lake Michigan. Thus it is seen how Indiana has received its present boundary limits as the result of the successive changes in 1803, 1805, 1809 and 1816. SECOND STAGE OF TERRITORIAL GOVERNMENT (1805-1S16.) The Ordinance of 1787 provided that whenever the population of the territory reached five thousand free male inhabitants it should pass upon the question of advancing to the second or representative stage. Governor Har- rison issued a proclamation August 4, 1804, directing an election to be held in the various counties of Indiana territory on the nth of the following month. In the entire territorv, then comprehending six counties, there were 48 DECATUR COUNTY. INDIANA. ciiil\- tliree liundred and ninety-one \-otes cast. The following table gives the result of this election: Count}". For Ad\ance. Against Advance. Total. Clark 35 13 48 Dearborn o 26 26 Kno.x 163 12 175 Randolph 40 21 61 St. Clair 22 59 81 W'ayne 000 Total 260 131 391 It will be noticed that there is no vote returned from Wayne and this is accounted for by the fact that the proclamation notifying the sheriff was not received in time to give it the proper advertisement. Wayne county at that time included practically all of the present state of Michigan and is not to be confused with the Wayne county later formed within the present limits of Indiana. As result of this election and its majority of one hundred and twenty-nine in favor of advancing to the second stage of government, the governor issued a proclamation calling for an election on January 3, 1805, of nine representatives, the same being proportioned to the counties as follows : Wayne, three ; Knox, two ; Dearborn, Clark, Randolph and St. Clair, one each. The members of the first territorial legislature of Indiana convened at Vinccnnes on July 29, 1805. The members of the house were as follows: Dr. George Fisher, of Randolph; William Biggs and Shadrach Bond, of St. Clair; Benjamin Parke and John Johnson, of Knox; Davis Floyd, of Clark, and Jesse B. Thomas, of Dearborn. This gives, however, only seven repre- sentatives, Wayne county having been set off as the territory of Michigan in the spring of this same year. A re-apportionment was made by the governor in order to bring the quota of representatives up to the required number. The Legislative Council consisted of five men as provided by the Ordin- ance of 1787, namely: Benjamin Chambers, of Dearborn; Samuel Gwath- mey, of Clark; John Rice Jones, of Knox; Pierre Menard, of Randolph, and John Hay, of St. Clair. It is not possible in this connection to give a detailed history of the territory of Indiana from 1805 until its admission to the Union in 18 1 6. Readers who wish to make a study of our state's history can find volumes which will treat the historv of the state in a much better manner b DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. ^Q than is possible in a volume of this character. It may be noted that there were five general assemblies of the Territorial Legislature during this period of eleven years. Each one of the five general assemblies was divided into two sessions, which, with the dates, are given in the appended table : First General Assembly — First session, July 29, 1805; second session, November 3, 1806. Second General Assembly — First session, August 12, 1807: second session, September 26, 1808. Third General Assembly — First session, November 12, 1810; second session, November 12, 181 1. Fourth General Assembly — First session, February i, 1813: second session, December 6, 1813. Fifth General Assembly — First session, August 15, 1814; second session, December 4, 1815. CONGRE.SSIONAL DELEG.ATES OF INDIANA TERRITORY. Indiana Territory was allowed a delegate in Congress from 1805 until the close of the territorial period. The first three delegates were elected by the Territorial Legislature, while the last four were elected by the qualified voters of the territory. The first delegate was Benjamin Parke, who was elected to succeed himself in 1807 over John Rice Jones, Waller Taylor and Shadrach Bond. Parke resigned March i, 1808, to accept a seat on the supreme judiciary of Indiana Territory, and remained on the supreme bench of Indiana after it was admitted to the Union, holding the position until his death at Salem, Indiana, July 12, 1835. Jesse B. Thomas was elected Octo- ber 22, 1808, to succeed Parke as delegate to Congress. It is this same Thomas who came to Brookville in 1808 with Amos Butler. He was a tricky, shifty, and, so his enemies said, an unscrupulous politician. He was later elected to Congress in Illinois and became the author of the Missouri Compromise. In the spring of 1809 the inhabitants of the territory were permitted to cast their first vote for the delegate to Congress. Three candi- dates presented themselves for the consideration of the voters, Jonathan Jennings, Thomas Randolph and John Johnson. There were only four counties in the state at this time, Knox, Harrison, Clark and Dearborn. Two counties, St. Clair and Randolph, were a part of the new territory of Illinois, which was cut of¥ from Indiana in the spring of 1809. The one newspaper of the territory waged a losing fight against Jennings, the latter appealing for (4) ' ^ 50 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. support on the ground of his anti-slavery views. The result of the election was as follows: Jennings, 428; Randolph, 402; Johnson, 81. Jonathan Jennings may be said to be the first successful politician produced in Indiana. His congressional career began in 1809 and he was elected to Congress four successive terms before 1816. He was president of the constitution conven- tion o"f 1816, first governor of the state and was elected a second time, but resigned to go to Congress, where he was sent for four more terms by the voters of his district. EFFORTS TO ESTABLISH SLAVERY IN INDIANA. The Ordinance of 1787 specifically provided that neither slavery nor any voluntary servitude should ever exist in the Northwest Territory. Notwith- standing this prohibition, slavery actually did exist, not only in the North- west Territory, but in the sixteen years while Indiana was a territory as well. The constitution of Indiana in 1S16 expressl}' forbade slavery and yet the census of 1820 reported one hundred and ninety slaves in Indiana, which was only forty-seven less than there was in 1810. Most of these slaves were held in the southwestern counties of the state, there being one hundred and eighteen in Knox, thirty in Gibson, eleven in Posey, ten in Vanderburg and the remainder widely scattered throughout the state. As late as 18 17 Frank- lin county scheduled slaves for taxation, listing them at three dollars each. The tax schedule for 1813 says that the property tax on "horses, town lots, servants of color and free males of color shall be the same as in 1814." Franklin county did not return slaves at the census of 1810 or 1820, but the above extract from the commissioners' record of Franklin county proved con- clusively that slaves were held there. Congress was petitioned on more than one occasion during the territorial period to set aside the prohibition against slavery, but on each occasion refused to assent to the appeal of the slavery advocates. While the constitution convention of 181 6 was in session, there was an attempt made to introduce slavery, but it failed to accomplish anything. THE INDIAN L.\NDS. The United States government bought from the Indians all of the land within the present state of Indiana with the exception of a small tract around Vincennes, which was given by the Indians to the inhabitants of the town about the middle of the eighteenth century. The first purchase of land was made in 1795, at which time a triangular strip in the southeastern part of the DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 51 State was secured by the treaty of Greenville. By the time Indiana was ad- mitted to the Union in 1S16, the following tracts had been purchased: Vin- cennes tract, June 7, 1803; Vincennes treaty tract, August 18 and 27, 1804; Grouseland tract, August 21, 1805; Harrison's purchase, September 30, 1809; Twelve-mile purchase, September 30, 1809. No more purchases were made from the Indians until the fall of 1818, at which time a large tract of land in the central part of i.ne state was pur- chased from the Indians. This tract included all of the land north of the Indian boundary lines of 1805 and 1809, and south of the Wabash river with the exception of what was known as the Miami reservation. This treaty, known as St. Mary's, was finally signed on October 6, 1818, and the next Legislature proceeded to divide it into two counties, Wabash and Delaware. ORGANIZATION OF COUNTIES. As fast as the population would warrant, new counties were established in this New Purchase and Hamilton county was the tenth to be so organized. This county was created by the legislative act of January 8, 1823, and began its formal career as an independent county on the 7th of the following April. For purposes of reference, a list of the counties organized up until 1823, when Hamilton county was established, is here appended. The dates given represent the time when the organization of the county became effective, since in many instances it was from a few months to as much as seven years after the act establishing the county was passed before it became effective. I 2 3 4 5' 6 7 8 9 10 II 12 13 14 Knox JtJne Clark Feb. Dearborn Mch. Harrison Dec. Jefferson Feb. Franklin Feb. Wayne Feb. Warrick Apr. Gibson Apr. Washington Jan. Switzerland Oct. Posey Nov. Perry Nov. Jackson Jan. 20, 1790 15- 3. 1 801 16. 7. 1803 17- 1808 18. I8II 19. I8II 20. I8II 21. I8I3 22. I8I3 23- 17. I8I4 24- I8I4 25- I8I4 26. I8I4 27. I8I6 28. Orange Feb. i, 1816 Sullivan Jan. 15, 1817 Jennings Feb. i, 1817 Pike Feb. i, 1817 Daviess Feb. 15, 1817 Dubois Feb. i, 1818 Spencer Feb. i, 1818 Vanderburgh Feb. i, 181 8 Vigo Feb. 15, 1818 Crawford Mch. i, 1818 Lawrence Mch. i, 1818 Monroe Apr. 10, 1818 Ripley Apr. 10, 1818 Randolph Aug. 10, 1818 52 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 29. Owen Jan. i, 1819 38. Morgan Feb. 15, 1822 30. Fayette Jan. i, 1819 39. Decatur Mch. 4, 1822 31. Floyd Feb. 2, 1819 40. Shelby Apr. i, 1822 32. Scott Feb. I, 1820 41. Rush Apr. i, 1822 33. Martin Feb. i, 1820 42. Marion -^ Apr. i, 1822 34. Union Feb. i, 1821 43. Putnam Apr. i, 1822 35. Greene Feb. 5, 1821 44. Henry June i, 1822 36. Bartholomew Feb. 12, 1821 45. Montgomery Mch. i, 1823 37. Parke Apr. 2, 1821 46. Hamilton Apr. 7, 1823 The first thirteen counties in the above list were all that were organized when the territory of Indiana petitioned Congress for an enabling act in 1815. They were in the southern part of the state and had a total population of sixty-three thousand eight hundred and ninety-seven. At that time the total state tax was only about five thousand dollars, while the assessment of the whole state in 18 16 amounted to only six thousand forty-three dollars and thirty-six cents. CHANGES IN THE CONSTITUTION OF INDIANA. The Constitution of 1816 was framed by forty-three delegates who met at Corydon from June 10 to June 29 of that year. It was provided in the Constitution of 1816 that a vote might be taken every twelve years on the question of amending, revising or writing a wholly new instrument of gov- ernment. Although several efforts were made to hold constitution conven- tions between 1816 and 1850, the vote failed each time until 1848. Elections were held in 1823, 1S28, 1840 and 1846, but each time there was returned an adverse vote against the calling of a constitutional convention. There were no amendments to the 1816 Constitution, although the revision of 1824, by Benjamin Parke and others was so thorough that it was said that the revision committee had done as much as a constitution convention could have done. It was not until 1848 that a successful vote on the question of calling a constitution convention was carried. There were many reasons which in- duced the people of the state to favor a convention. Among these may be mentioned the following: The old Constitution provided that all the state officers except the governor and lieutenant-governor should be elected by the legislature. Many of the county and township officers were appointed by the county commissioners. Again, the old Constitution attempted to handle too many matters of local concern. All divorces from 181 6 to 1851 were t> DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 53 granted by the Legislature. Special laws were passed which would apply to particular counties and even to particular townships in the county. If Nobles- ville wanted an alley vacated or a street closed, it had to appeal to the Legis- lature for permission to do so. If a man wanted to ferry people across a stream in Posey county, his representative presented a bill to the Legislature asking that the proposed ferryman be given permission to ferry people across the stream. The agitation for free schools attracted the support of the edu- cated people of the state, and most of the newspapers were outspoken in their advocacy of better educational privileges. The desire for better schools, for freer representation in the selection of officials, for less interference by the Legislature in local affairs, led to a desire on the part of majority of the people of the state for a new Constitution. The second constitutional convention of Indiana met at Indianapolis, October 7, iS'50, and continued in session for four months. The one hun- dred and fifty delegates labored faithfully to give the state a Constitution fully abreast of the times and in accordance with the best ideas of the day. More power was given the people by allowing them to select not only all of the state officials, but also their county officers as well. The convention of 1850 took a decided stand against the negro and proposed a referendum on the c|uestion of prohibiting the further emigration of negroes into the state of Indiana. The subsequent vote on this cpiestion showed that the people were not disposed to tolerate the colored race. As a matter of fact no negro or mulatto could legally come into Indiana from 1852 until 1881, when the restriction was removed by an amendment of the Constitution. Another important feature of the new Constitution was the provision for free schools. What we now know as a public school supported at the expense of the state, was unknown under the 1816 Constitution. The new Constitution estab- lished a system of free public schools, and subsequent statutory legislation strengthened the constitutional provision so that the state now ranks among the leaders in educational matters throughout the nation. The people of the state had voted on the question of free schools in 1848 and had decided that thev should be established, but there was such a strong majority opposed to free schools that nothing was done. Orange county gave only an eight per cent vote in favor of free schools, while Putnam and Monroe, containing DePauw and Indiana Universities, respectively, voted adversely by large majorities. But, with the backing of the Constitution, the advocates of free schools began to push the fight for their establishment, and as a result of the legislative acts of 1855, 1857 and 1867, the public schools were placed upon a sound basis. 54 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Such in brief were the most important features of the 1832 Constitution, It has remained substantially to this day as it was written sixty-five years ago. It is true there have been some amendments, but the changes of 1878 and 1 88 1 did not alter the Constitution in any important particular. There was no concerted effort toward calling a constitutional convention until the Legislature of 19 13 provided for a referendum on the question at the polls, November 4, 19 14. Despite the fact that all the political parites had de- clared in favor of a constitutional convention in their platforms, the question was voted down by a large majority. An effort was made to have the ques- tion submitted by the Legislature of 191 5, but the Legislature refused to submit the question to the voters of the state. CAPITALS OF NORTHWEST TERRITORY AND INDIANA. The present state of Indiana was comprehended within the Northwest Territory from 1787 to 1800, and during that time the capital was located within the present state of Ohio. When the Ordinance of 1787 was put in operation on July 17, 1788, the capital was established at Marietta, the name being chosen by the directors of the Ohio Company on July 2, of the same year. The name Marietta was selected in honor of the French Queen, Marie Antoinette, compounded by curious combination of the first and last syllables of her name. When Indiana was set off by the act of May 7, iSoo, the same act located the capital at Vincennes where it remained for nearly thirteen years. The old building in which the Territorial Assembly first met in 1805 is still standing in Vincennes. In the spring of 1813 the capital of the territory was removed to Corydon and it was in that quaint little village that Indiana began its career as a state. It remained there until November, 1824, when Samuel Merrill loaded up all of the state's effects in three large wagons and hauled them overland to the new capital — Indianapolis. Indianapolis had been chosen as the seat of government by a committee of ten men, appointed in 1820 by the Legislature. It was not until 1824, however, that a building was erected in the new capital which would accommodate the state officials and the General Assembly. The first court house in Marion county was built on the site of the present building, and was erected with a view of utilizing it as a state house until a suitable capitol building could be erected. The state continued to use the Marion county court house until 1835, by which time an imposing state house had been erected. This building was in use until 1877, when it was razed to make way for the present beautiful building. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 55 MILITARY HISTORY. Indiana has had some of its citizens in four wars in which United States has engaged since iSoo: The War of 1812, the Mexican War, the Civil War, and the Spanish-American War. One of the most important engage- ments ever fought against the Indians in the United States was that of the battle of Tippecanoe, November 7, iSii. For the two or three years pre- ceding, Tecumseh and his brother, the Prophet, had been getting the Indians ready for an insurrection. Tecumseh made a long trip throughout the west- ern and soutliern part of the United States for the purpose of getting the Indians all over the country to rise up and drive out the white man. While he was still in the South, Governor Harrison descended upon the Indians at Tippecanoe and dealt them a blow from which they never recovered. The British had been urging the Indians to rise up against the settlers along the frontier, and the repeated depredations of the savages but increased the hos- tility of the United States toward England. General Harrison had about seven hundred fighting men, while the Indians numbered over a thousand. The Americans lost thirty-seven by death on the battlefield, twenty-five mor- tally wounded and one hundred and twenty-six more or less seriously wounded. The savages carried most of their dead away, but it is known that about forty were actually killed in the battle and a proportionately large num- ber wounded. In addition to the men who fought at Tippecanoe, the pio- neers of the territory sent their quota to the front during the War of 1812. Unfortunately, records are not available to show the enlistments by counties. During the administration of Governor Whitcomb (1846-49) the United States was engaged in a war with Mexico. Indiana contributed five regi- ments to the government during this struggle, and her troops performed with a spirit of singular promptness and patriotism during all the time they were at the front. No Northern state had a more patriotic governor during the Civil War than Indiana, and had every governor in the North done his duty as conscien- tiously as did Governor Morton that terrible struggle would undoubtedly have been materially shortened. When President Lincoln issued his call on April 15. "1861. for 75,000 volunteers, Indiana was asked to furnish 4,683 men as its quota. A week later there were no less than 12,000 volunteers at Camp Morton at Indianapolis. This loyal uprising was a tribute to the patriotism of the people, and accounts for the fact that Indiana sent more than 200,000 men to the front during the war. Indiana furnished prac- tically seventy-five per cent of its total population capable of bearing arms, [j6 DECATL'R COL'XTV. IXDIAXA. and on this basis Delaware was the only state in the Union which exceeded Indiana. Of the troops sent from Indiana, 7,243 w^ere killed or mortally wounded, and 19,429 died from other causes, making a total death loss of over thirteen per cent for all the troops furnished. During the summer of 1863 Iniliana \vas thrown into a frenzy of excite- ment when it was learned that General Morgan had crossed the Ohio with 2,000 cavalryn.icn under his command. Probably Indiana never experienced a more exciting month than July of th.at year. Morgan entered the state in Harrison countv and ad\anced northward through Corydon to Salem in Washington county. As his men went along they robbed orchards, looted farm houses, stole all llic horses which they could find and burned consider- able property. From Salem. Morgan turned with his men to the east, having been deterred from his threatened advance on Indianapolis by the knowledge that the local militia of the state would soon be too strong for him. He hur- ried with his men toward the Ohio line, stopping at Versailles long enough to loot the county treasury. Morgan passed through Dearborn county over into Ohio, near Harrison, and a few days later, Morgan and most of his band were captured. During the latter part of the war there was considerable opposition to its prosecution on the part of tlie Democrats of this state. An organization known as the Knights of the Golden Circle at first, and later as the Sons of Liberty, was instrumental in stirring up much trouble throughout the state. Probably historians will never be able to agree as to the degree of their culpability in thwarting the go\'ernment authorities in the conduct of the war. That they did many o\ert acts cannot be questioned and that they collected fire arms for traitorous designs cannot be denied. Governor Morton and General Carringlon, by a system of close espionage, were able to know at all times just what w^as transpiring in the councils of these orders. In the cam- paign of 1864 there was an open denunciation through the Republican press of the Sons of Liberty. On October 8 of that year the Republican news- papers carried these startling headlines : "You can reliuke this treason. The traitors intend to bring war to your home. Meet them at the ballot box while Grant and Sherman meet them on the battle field." A number of the leaders were arrested, convicted in a military court and sentenced to be shot. H(iwe\er, they were later pardoned. Th.e S])anish-.American War of 1898 has been the last one in which troops from Indiana have borne a jjart. W^hen President McKinley issued his call for 75,000 volunteers on April 25. 1898, Indiana was called upon to furnish three regiments, ^^'ar was ofticially declared A]iril 2^. and formally DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. zy came to an end by th.e signing of a protocol on August 12 of the same year. The main engagements of importance were the- sea battles of Manila and Santiago and the land engagements of El Caney and San Juan Hill. .Ac- cording to the treaty of Paris, signed December 12, 1898, Spain relini|uished her so\-ereignty over Cuba, ceded to the United States Porto Rico and her other West India Island pos.sessions, as well as the island of Guam in the Pacific. Spain also transferred her rights in the Philippines for the sum of twenty million dollars paid to her for public work and impro\cmcnts con- structed by the Spanish government. POLITICAL HISTORY. It is not possible to trace in detail the political history of Indiana for the past century and in this connection an attempt is made onlv to survev brietlv the political history of the state. For more than half a century Indiana has been known as a pivotal state in politics. In 1816 there was only nno. political party and Jennings, Noble, Taylor, Hendricks and all of the politicians of that day were grouped into this one — the Democratic party. Whatever differences in views they might have had were due to local issues and not to any questions of national portent. Questions concerning the improvements of ri\-ers, the building of canals, the removal of court houses and similar questions of state importance only divided the politicians in the early history of Indiana into groups. There was one group known as the White Water faction, another called the Vincennes crowd, and still another designated as the White ri\er delegation. From 1S16 until as late as 1832, Indiana was the scene of personal politics, and during the years Adams, Clay and Jackson were candidates for the presidency on the same ticket, men were known politically as Adams men. Clay men or Jackson men. The election returns in the twenties and thirties disclose no tickets labeled Democrat, Whig or Republican, but the words "Adams," "Clay," or Jackson." The question of internal improvements which arose in the Legislature of 1836 was a large contributing factor in the di\-ision of the politicians of the state. The \Vhig party may be dated from 1832, although it was not until four years later that it came into national prominence. The Democrats elected the state officials, including the governor, down to i8'3i, but in that year the opposition party, later called the Whigs, elected Noah Noble governor. For the next twelve years the Whigs, with their cry of internal improvements, controlled the state. The Whigs went out of power with Samuel Bigger in 1843, and when they came into power again they appeared S8 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. under the name of Republicans in 1861. Since the Civil War the two parties have practically divided the leadership between them, there having been seven Republicans and six Democrats elected governor of the state. The following table gives a list of the governors of the Northwest Territory, Indiana Terri- tory and the state of Indiana. The Federalists were in control up to 1800 and Harrison and his followers may be classed as Democratic-Republicans. The politics of the governors of the state are indicated in the table. GOVERNORS OF INDIANA. Of the Territory Northwest of the Ohio — Arthur St. Clair 1787-1800 Of the Territory of Indiana — John Gibson (acting) July 4, 1800- VVilliam H. Harrison 1801- Thomas Posey 1812- Of the State of Indiana — Jonathan Jennings, Dem. 1816- Ratliff Boon, Dem. September 12 to December 5, William Hendricks, Dem. 1822- Janies B. Ray (acting), Dem. Feb. 12 to Dec. 11, James B. Ray, Dem. 1825- Noah Noble, \Whig 1831- David Wallace, Whig 1837- Samuel Bigger, Whig 1840- James Whitcomb, Dem. 1843- Paris C. Dunning (acting), Dem. 1848- Joseph A. Wright, Dem. 1849- Ashbel P. Willard, Dem. 1857- Abram A. Hammond (acting), Dem. 1860- Plenry S. Lane, Rep. January 14 to January 16, Oliver P. Morton (acting), Rep. 1861- Oliver P. Morton, Rep. 1865- Conrad Baker (acting). Rep. 1867- Conrad Baker, Rep. 1869- Thomas A. Hendricks, Dem. 1873- James D. Williams, Dem. 1877- Isaac P. Gray (acting), Dem. 1880- Albert G. Porter. Rep. 1881- 801 812 816 822 822 825 825 831 837 840 843 848 849 857 860 861 861 865 867 869 873 877 880 881 885 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 59 Isaac p. Gray, Dem. 1885-1889 Alvin P. Hoyey, Rep. 1889-1891 Ira J. Chase (acting). Rep Nov. 24, 1891 to Jan. 9, 1893 Claude Matthews, Dem. 1893-1897 James A. Mount, Rep. 1897-1901 Winfield T. Durbin, Rep. 1901-1905 J. Frank Hanley, Rep. 1905-1909 Thomas R. Marshall, Dem. 1909-1913 Samuel R. Ralston, Dem. 1913- A CENTURY OF GROWTH. I Indiana was the first territory created out of the old Northwest Territory and the second state to be formed. It is now on the eve of its one hundredth anniversary, and it becomes the purpose of the historian in this connection to give a brief survey of what these one hundred years have done for the state. There has been no change in territory limits, but the original territory has been subdivided into counties year by year, as the population warranted, until from thirteen counties in i8'i6 the state grew to ninety-two counties by 1859. Frorn 181 6 to 1840 new counties were organized every year with the exception of one year. Starting in with a population of 5,641 in 1800, Indiana has increased by leaps and bounds until it now has a population of two million seven hundred thousand eight hundred and seventy-six. The appended table is interesting in showing the growth of population by decades since 1800 : Per Cent Census Decades. Population. Increase. of Increase. 1800 5.641 1810 24,520 18,879 334.7 1820 147,178 122,658 500.2 1830 343.031 195.853 1331 1840 685.866 342,835 99.9 1850 988,416 302,550 44.1 i860 1,350,428 362,012 '36.6 1870 1,680,637 330,209 24.5 1880 1,978,301 297,664 17.7 1890 2,192,404 214,103 10.8 1900 2,516,462 324,058 14.8 1910 2.700,876 184,414 y.T, 60 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Statistics are usuall}' very dry and uninteresting, but there are a few figures wliicli are at least instructi\e if not interesting. For instance, in 1910, 1,143,835 people of Indiana lived in towns and cities of more than 2,500. There were S'22,434 voters, and 580,557 men between the ages of eighteen and forty-four were eligible for military service. An interesting book of statistics from which these figures are taken covering every phase of the growth of the state is found in the biennial report of the state statistician. The state has increased in wealth as well as population and the total state tax of si.x thousand forty-three dollars and thirty-six cents of 1816 increased in 1915 to more than six million. In 1816 the only factories in the state were grist or saw mills ; all of the clothing, furniture and most of the farming tools were made by the pioneers themselves. At that time the farmer was his own doctor, his own blacksmith, his own lawyer, his own dentist and, if he had di\ine services, he had to be the preacher. But now it is changed. The spin- ning wlieel finds its resting place in the attic ; a score of occupations have arisen to satisfy the manifold wants of the farmer. Millions of dollars are now in- \'ested in factories, other millinns are invested in steam and electric roads, still other millions in public utility plants of all kinds. The governor now receives a larger salary than did all the state officials put together in 1861, while the county sheriff has a salary which is more than double the compensation first allowed the governor of the state. Indiana is rich in natural resources. It not only has millions of acres of good farming land, but it has had fine forests in the past. From the timber of its woods have been built the hom.es for the past one hundred years and, if rightly conser\'ed there is timlier for many years yet to come. The state has beds of coal and cjuarries of stone which are not surpassed in any state in the Union. For many years natural gas was a boon to Indiana manufacturing, but it was used so extravagently that it soon became exhausted. Some of the largest factories of their kind in the country are to be found in the Hoosier state. The steel works at Gary employs tens of thousands of men and are constantly increasing in importance. At Elwood is the largest tin plate fac- tor}- in the world, while Evansville boasts of the largest cigar factory in the world. At South end the Studebaker and Oliver manufacturing plants turn out millions of dollars worth of goods every year. When it is known that over half of the population of the state is now living in towns and cities, it must be readily seen that farming is no longer the sole occupation. .A. sys- tem of railroads has been built which brings every corner of the state in close touch with Indianapolis. In fact, every county seat but four is in railroad connection with the capital of the state. Every county has its local telephone DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 6l systems, its rural free deliveries and its good roads unifying the various parts of the county. -Ml of this makes for better civilization and a happier and more contented people. Indiana prides herself on her educational system. With si.xteen thousand public and parochial school teachers, with three state institutions of learning, a score of church schools of all kinds as well as private institutions of learning, Indiana stands high in educational circles. The state maintains universities at Bloomington and Lafayette and a normal school at Terre Haute. Many of the churches have schools supported in part by their denominations. The Catholics have the largest Catholic university in the United States at Notre Dame, while St. Mary's of the Woods at Terre Haute is known all over the world. Academies under Catholic supervision are maintained at Indianapolis, Terre Haute, Fort \\''ayne, Rensselaer, Jasper and Oldenburg. The Method- ists have institutions at DePauw, Moore's Hill and Upland. The Presby- terian schools are Wabash and Hanover Colleges. The Christian church is in control of Butler and ]\Ierom Colleges. Concordia at Fort Wayne is one of the largest Lutheran schools in the LInited States. The Quakers support Earlham College, as well as the academies at Fairmount, Bloomingdale, Plainfield and Spiceland. The Baptists are in charge of Franklin College, while the LTnited Brethern gi\'e their allegiance to Indiana Central University at Indianapolis. The Seventh-Day Adventists have a school at Boggstown. The Dunkards at North Manchester and the Mennonites at Goshen maintain schools for their respective churches. The state seeks to take care of all of its unfortunates. Its charitable, benevolent and correctional institutions rank high among similar institutions in the country. Insane asylums are located at Indianapolis, Richmond, Logansport, Evansville and Madison. The State Soldiers' Home is at Lafavette, while the National Soldiers' Home is at Marion. The Soldiers and Sailors' Orphans' Home at Knightstown, is main- tained for the care and education of the orphan children of Union soldiers and sailors. The state educates and keeps them until they are sixteen years of age if they have not been given homes in families before they reach that age. Institutions for the education of the blind and also the deaf and dumb are located at Indianapolis. The state educates all children so afflicted and teaches them some useful trade which will enable them to make their own way in the world. The School for Feeble Minded at Fort Wayne has had more than one thousand children in attendance annually for several years. Within the past few years an epileptic village has been established at New Castle, Indiana, for the care of those so afflicted. A prison is located at 62 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Michigan City for the incarceration of male criminals convicted by any of the courts of the state of treason, murder in the first or second degree, and of all persons convicted of any felony who at the time of conviction are thirty years of age and over. The Reformatory at Jeffersonville takes care of male criminals between the ages of sixteen and thirty, who are guilty of crimes other than those just mentioned. The female criminals from the ages of fifteen upwards are kept in the women's prison at Indianapolis. A school for incorrigible boys is maintained at Plainfield. It receives boys be- tween the ages of seven and eighteen, although no boy can be kept after he reaches the age of twenty-one. Each county provides for its own poor and practically every county in the state has a poor farm and many of them have homes for orphaned or indigent children. Each county in the state also maintains a correctional institution known as the jail, in which prisoners are committed while waiting for trial or as punishment for convicted crime. But Indiana is great not alone in its material prosperity, but also in those things which make for a better appreciation of life. Within the limits of our state have been born men who were destined to become known through- out the nation. Statesmen, ministers, diplomats, educators, artists and literary men of Hoosier birth have given the state a reputation which is envied by our sister states. Indiana has furnished Presidents and Vice- Presidents, distinguished members of the cabinet and diplomats of world wide fame; her literary men have spread the fame of Indiana from cnast to coast. Who has not heard of Wallace, Thompson, Nicholson, Tarking- ton, McCutcheon, Bolton, Ade, Major, Stratton-Porter, Riley and hundreds of others who have courted the muses? And we would like to be living one hundred years from today and see whether as much progress will have been made in the growth of the state as in the first one hundred years of its history. In 2015 poverty and crime will be reduced to a minimum. Poor houses will be unknown, orphanages will have vanished and society will have reached the stage where happiness and con- tentment reign supreme. Ever}' loyal Hoosier should feel as our poete.'^s, Sarah T. Bolton, has said : "The heavens never spanned, The breezes never fanned, A fairer, brighter land Than our Indiana." CHAPTER II. c;e(,)i.ogy and topography. l.OCATION AND SIZE. Decatur county is in the SDUtheastern part of Indiana, one county removed from the Ohio boundary, and two removed from the Ohio river. Its greatest length is twenty-one miles, greatest breadth the same. Its area is approximately three hundred and seventy-five scjuare miles. GEOLOGY AND PHYSIOGRAPHY. Geologically, there is very little difference between this county and Jennings. In the deepest stream lieds in the southern part of the county the soft limestones of the Hudson River formation appear. These outcrops are small and of no practicable importance, since they contriluite nothing to the soils and are in themselves of no value. The southeastern third of this county is underlain by the Niagara limestone, perhaps the most valuable stone in the state, after the oolitic. In Decatur county it lies, as a rule, close to the surface, usuallv at depths of four to twelve feet on the level, out- cropping on stream banks, and occasionally being found only at depths of thirty feet. It is a very valuable rock commercially in this county, being quarried extensively at Newpoint. Westport, St. Paul and in many small local quarries. The product is used for building stone, especially for trim- ming, for abutments, for flagging in sidewalks, and in a crushed state for macatlam and for concrete construction. From the standpoint of soils, it is of im])urtance chiefly from the fact of its resistance to weathering, which has resulted in very flat uplands. The northwestern half of the county is underlain at depths of five to forty feet by the corniferous limestone, a softer rock as a rule than the Niagara. Finally, the entire surface of the county, except near the streams, is covered with a mantle of glacial waste, which effectively covers the underhiiig rocks o\'er practicall}' all the county. 64 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. The topography of the county is a product of two great factors — the Niagara limestone and tlie arrangement of tlie (h-ift. The latter is disposed in belts of one to fi\e miles in width crossing the count}- from southwest to northeast. In the northwest corner there occurs a till-plain where the sur- face is nearh- le\el, rolling in gentle waves and only ;i little broken by streams. Then comes a belt about four luiles in width of ujjland — a glacial moraine. This is followed by another till-plain, from si.x to ten miles in width, gently rolling, with occasional knolls and swales, somewhat cut by strcatus. This is followed by a second ridge, averaging five miles in width, with the remain- ing southeastern corner occupied by a flat plain of loess. Under the last fea- ture lies the Niagara limestone, at an average depth of seven feet. The streams are comparatively of little importance in this county as agents in bringing about the present surface, since this surface would be jiractically the same if the streams had not come into lieing. Their courses have been largely determined by the belts of drift. THE SOILS IN DETAIL. In describing the soils of this county, one can do no better than take them in their order from one side of the county to the other. .\t the outset, it is evident that one factor which has been of the first importance heretofore will have little to do with the soils here, namely, the character of the under- Iving rock. It is proljable that not an acre of tillable soil in this cotnitv has resulted from the disintegration of the underlying rock, InU has, on the C(jn- trary. been carried here through the agency of the ice from some region to the north. We shall begin our discussion of the soils in this county with a soil which is known as the Miami clay loam. This soil occurs in a small area in the extreme southeastern corner of the count}-. It is part of the great area of this soil which occurs in Ripley county. It is there described as a yellow clay, sometimes almost white where it is dry, with mottles of darker \-ellow in its deeper portions. This soil is underlain with I)lue till, and ii-i most places grades into that form of glacial waste imperceptil)ly. It consists almost entirel}- of clay, with a small admixture (usually less than five per cent) of sand. There are practically no gra\-el peliljles in it. It is a pretty good material for tile and brickmaking, and has been used considerably for that in the past. From the farming standpoint it is poor. Grasses do fairly well, and -wheat. Fertilizing must be constantly done, and, away from the streams, tiling. ^=r-: : ^ PM M 'y^'^'-u ^y^^ ra li ■ I- M h IP A; \ 1 '^"'^■|RP"R^ S ' • "^ MHivMUn - ., -; A j^i: .:. ;-j mA "^x- ' ■ - , ■ ..^^^B! HBP' .' -.-■'■'*!. ^^fe|».-,^>v.': W , -..-fa ';t^j-^an)', of Toledo, Ohio, for twenty-se\-en hundred and fifty dollars. The contract for furnishing the court room, library, the judge's private office, and the offices of the clerk, sheriff, recorder, superintendent of schools, treasurer and auditor was given to the Grand Rapids bTirniture Compan\-, of Grand Rapids, Michigan, on February 7, 1890. The Iniilding was inspected and accepted by the commissioners and architect on March 14, 1890, "excepting the painting, and a part of the wainscot in the obscure portions of the corridors, the clearing out of the cellar and refitting the same." The commissioners at the time the contract for remodeling was "l^ DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 8l let were, Everett Hamilton, Henry Steining and Ezra Guthrie, and when the building was accepted, Henry Steining, Ezra Guthrie and Augustus Miller. In 1903 the building was in need uf repairs and on March 7 the com- missioners — Jethro C. Meeks, Uriah Pri\ett and Jesse Styers — awarded H. L. Shute the contract of making certain repairs, for fiftv-two hundred dol- lars. At this same session of the commissioners, plans for a hitchrack were submitted by the engineer, J. W. Craig, and accepted. Bids were ordered to be received for the sale of the old fence about the court house square park at this same meeting. THE TREE ON THE COURT HOUSE TOWER. In the summer of 1870 a citizen of Greensburg, whose name posterity has not preserved, was examining the court house tower with a spyglass, when he noticed, springing from the third crevice above the water sheet on the east side of the tower, one hundred and ten feet aljove the ground, a small twig. From that day down to the present time the fame of the tree on the tower has been heralded throughout the world. Apostrophes, prose epics, poems galore and even songs have been written about it. Strangers to the city always ask to be shown the curiosity the first thing, many not being con\'inced that there is such a tree until they actually see it. The first picture of the tree appeared in a local paper in the issue of January 10, 1879, when the court house and tree were shown in connection with an advertisement of St. John's Lone Tree Medicine Company. Since that time the tree has been exhiljited pictorially all over the world, and postal cards by the tens of thousands have convinced a doubting world that such a tree really exists. By 1884, according to one of the local papers, the bole of the tree was four inches in diameter and the tree itself was nine feet in height. Some time during the latter part of the seventies other trees sprang up on the tower, and at one time no less than seven were casting their shade over the tower. This grove was allowed to flourish until the court house was remodeled in 1888, when it was deemed necessary to remove some of them. The largest tree of the forest was getting of such dimen- sions that it was threatening to tear up the roof, and since it was a ques- tion of either saving the tree or the roof, the tree had to be sacrificed. Three other small trees were removed at this time. Since then all the others have died except the one on the northeast corner. At the present time (1015) (6) 82 DECATUR COUNTY, INMANA. this one tree is about eighteen feet high and has a bole of about five inches in diameter. Strange to say, it never seems to be affected by the summer droughts, but remains green even when the trees in the court house yard are showing the effects of dry weather. Among the many poems written about this famous tree, the one by D. Eckley Hunter, tlien of Washington. Indiana, and an instructor in the teacliers' county institute at the time, is the best which has come to atten- tion. Professor Hunter read it at the close of the session, August 22, 1884. Mr. Hunter has a fairy to explain the origin of the tree and then draws a moral. The complete poem has fourteen stanzas, but only eight of them are here given : THE GROVE ON THE COURT HOUSE TOWER. The wonders of nature -are many, 1 ween, They come to my mind in a shower; But where may so wondrous a wonder be seen As the grove on the top of the tower? It troubled my dreams, it puzzled my brain, Till Ina and Pearl with a flower, Came in and the wonderful wonder made plain Of the grove on the top of the tower. They said they were rambling — Pearl told me herself — And stopped to admire that flower When in it a fairy they heard tell an elf Of the grove on the top of the tower. (What the fairy said) It is many and many a year ago Since the men who wielded the power Determined to plant and determined to grow A grove at the foot of the tower. They planted, they watered and they waited long For the shade of the leafy bower: At length the reward of their labors came In the grove at the foot of the tower. Then angels looked down from their home above. And smiled on these men of power; And said, "We'll plant, yes, plant them a grove On the topmost stones of the tower." It is thus they smile on deeds below That are done for a future hour; And that none forget, they have caused to grow A grove on the top of the tower. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 83 May God bless the angels, and God bless the men Who plant for a future hour. And God bless the shade of the maples, and then The grove on the top of the tower. THE COUNTY JAIL. Until the organization of Decatur county, residents in this part of the "New Purchase" had been Hving without law, so consequently there were no legal punishments for transgressions. But with the organization of the county and the formation of a local government, a jail was rendered neces- sary. The board of commissioners, meeting on February ii, 1823, ordered the construction of a log jail and at a subsecjuent session, fixed its specifica- tions as follows : "To be twenty by twenty-four feet square ; the walls to be of stone and two and one-half feet thick, laid with good lime mortar, and every hole to extend through the wall. The first story to be seven feet high ; one window in the lower story to be fourteen inches square, to be bounded with solid rock three feet in length and not less than fourteen inches thick, the bars to be one and one-half inches square, well riveted to the frame and to be four squares of three inches." The room last described was the dungeon, intended for the incarcera- tion of prisoners of the worse type. Entrance to it was effected through a trap-door in the floor of the upper story. Construction of the upper story was very similar to that of the lower, save that those confined there got fresh air from two windows, instead of one. This room was intended for keeping prisoners jailed for minor offenses. A narrow stairway on the outside of the building led to the door of the upper room, the only entrance to the jail. This building stood on the west side of the court house yard until 1832. It was very poorly con- structed, and incapable of detaining anyone who really wanted to get out. According to tradition, Hiram Hendricks, who, with Robert Church, did the stone work on the building, was the first person to be incarcerated therein. As the story is told, Hendricks was jailed for debt upon com- plaint of Owen O'Reiley. The next morning, when O'Reiley went to jail for the purpose of interviewing his debtor he found him seated outside, looking regretfully at a huge hole, which he had cut through the wall in order to get to the fresh air. On May 4, 1830, the board ordered that "the Agent of tlie County, be instructed to sell to the lowest bidder the repairing of the jail of said 84 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. County in the following manner, towit. the sides of the Upper Story thereof to be lined with oak plank one and one-half inches thick to be set up and down, well secured at the bottom and top and lined across the same with three- quarter poplar plank, tongued and grooxed and nailed with good six-penny nails not to exceed three inches apart on the whole face of the lining and that the lining be turned around the door and windows to the grates and likewise the fixing of the trap door and some convenient way to be made to descend to the lower room of said jail, the whole to be completed in a good workmanlike manner by the first day of October next." But in 1832 it was decided that a new jail was needed and the follow- ing order is taken from page 204 of the commissioners' court records : "Ordered by the board that the sherii¥ of the county do proceed after (after giving three weeks' notice in the Political Observer) to sell on the 2d Saturday in June next, at the door of the court house in Greensburgh, the building of a jail for said county of the following description, to wit: "To be of hewn timbers not less than twelve inches square, the whole of the timbers to be eighteen feet long, a double wall, the corners dove- tail notches, the inside walls to extend and notch on the outside walls, a space between tlie walls of six inches to be filled with wide rocks set on edge, the under floor to be the same as the wall with stone between, the logs crossing each other, the foundation or joist course of the floor and the bottom rounds of the outside walls to be of white oak, the timber of the balance of the walls of good, sound wood such as beach, sugar, etc., twt) windows in the lower story one on the west and the other on the east side of the house, opposite each other of the following description, six inches in height and four feet wide to be filled with grates of iron one inch square, three inches apart, to stand up and down and to pass through a bar of iron half an inch thick and three inches wide to cross the grate in the center, the bar to extend in the timbers two inches, a plate of rolled iron half an inch thick and to extend in the walls a proper distance, the rolled iron to cover and Ije well spiked on the jams around the windows, the logs of the walls to be notched close and the inside walls to be laid in lime mortar. The second floor to be of one tier of logs hewn twelve inches in thickness, the edges hewn square. The second story to be in like manner of the first, with a tier of joists one foot thick, laid close, resting on the inside wall, and butting against the outside wall to be hewn to a thickness of twelve inches, the edges squared and one tier crossing them in the same manner to extend out for the room to stand on — and window in the upper story similar as in the lower story — one door of common size DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 85 to be cut in the end well on the north side, in the upper story a door frame to be made as wide as the thickness of the walls and well, fastened in both walls, the frame to be of white oak four inches thick and to be lined on the inside on the walls, and the frame well spiked to the walls with sufficient iron spikes, not less than eight inches long. The shutter to be two and a half feet wide and six feet high, to be made of two-inch oak plank, made double, well spiked together with strong iron spikes, a strong lock with double bolts to be w^ell imbedded in the door with a sufficient key — both sides of the door to be entirely lined with strong sheet iron nailed on with one nail to every three inches, a sheet of hammered iron, half an inch thick, twelve inches long and eight inches wide to be set in the frame with strong spikes to receive the bolt and to be bent so as to cover the inside of the frame. A suljstantial stairway to be erected on the outside of the jail to reach the door with a good platform, the timber of white oak ; the build- ing to be well covered with shingles, the gables weatherboarded, the eaves boxed and plain cornice, the comers of the house to be neatly turned down, a hatchway to be made in the center of the second floor two feet and a half square with a sufficient shutter lock and key. The doors to be hung with strong wrought iron hinges. The whole of the work to be completed in a strong workmanlike manner. Stories to be seven and one-half feet high in the clear inside. The building to stand on a stone foundation of one foot underground and six inches above the surface, of the earth three feet thick, to be of good stone, laid in a workmanlike manner. The grates in the windows to be set in a frame in the center of walls to be made strong and rabited in the logs two inches, the inside of the frame to be lined with iron half an inch thick, well spiked on. And the logs where they are cut to make the windows to be lined with rolled iron half an inch thick, well spiked on. "The wh(jle to be completed by the fourth Monday in October next. The pavments to be made when the work is completed by orders drawn on the treasury of the county. One bid reserved for the use of the county. We undertake to give bond and security to the acceptance of the sheriff for the faithful performance of the work. "And it is further ordered that the sheriff, at the time and place afore- said, sell the old jail on a credit until the first of January next, for the best price he can obtain for the same, one bid reserved for the use of the county — bond and security required. "And it is further ordered that George O. JMcCoy be appointed to 86 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. inspect the work of the new jail as it progresses, who will report the same to this board." The report of the day's session is signed by Seth Lo\ve, George \V. Hopkins and Edward Tanner, commissioners. On June 15, 1859, the board of commissioners passed a motion to remove the county jail from the corner of the court house square and ordered the sheriff and auditor of the county to purchase a suitable site, and to remove all material from the old to the new site. A site on the north side of West Main street, a half block from the public square, was selected and the old jail was removed in September, 1859. Edwin May was engaged, at the price of two hundred and fifty dollars, as the architect and superintendent of construction. Bids were received for the construc- tion of the building on September 30, 1859, and the contract awarded to Henry H. Talbott and Richard B. Thompson. The contract price of the building and the date of its acceptance by the board could not be ascertained. This building was in continuous use as the county jail until 1880. On March 10, of that year, the commissioners made it a matter of record in the minutes of their court that they had "visited the jails of Shelbyville and Columbus, with the view of better determining plans for erecting a jail in this county." On April 13, 1S80, the commissioners, S. H. Logan, Wren Grayson and Henry W. Badeker, accepted the plans and specifica- tion for a new jail submitted by Edward Carlisle, an architect. At a spe- cial session on May 20, 1880, bids for its construction w'ere examined and the contract awarded to Rosebrough & Company, of Greensburg, for eleven thousand three hundred and fifty dollars and the old jail was sold to Rich- ard J. Braden, the highest bidder, for three hundred and fifty dollars cash. However, on the next morning, May 21, Rosebrough & Company refused to accept the contract and the work was let to the next best and lowest bidder, the Greensburg Limestone Company, of Greensburg, for twelve thousand nine hundred and ninety-nine dollars. The new building was to be built on the site of the old one and was to be completed by October i, fol- lowing. This building is still in use as the county jail. CHAPTER IV. COUNTY OFFICERS. COMMISSIONERS. Four distinct boards of county commissioners and two boards of jus- tices have had charge of the aiTairs of Decatur county since its organization. The first board of commissioners held office from 1822 to 1824. It was then succeeded by a board of justices, composed of two justices of the peace from each township. This board held its last meeting on July 4, 1831- A board of three county commissioners then had charge of affairs until 1835, m which year a board of eighteen justices was created. The latter board held swav until Tune 7. 1847, in spite of the fact that the Legislature, in 1842, had 'dissolved such boards in Indiana. The Decatur county board was dis- solved by a special act of Legislature. January 14. i847- A '^oard of three commissioners then took office and when tlie new constitution was adopted, in 1852 this arrangement was continued. The three commissioners held full sway until 1899. in which year the legislative act creating county councils restricted their powers to a limited extent. The first board of county commissioners met on :\Iay 14. 1822, at the home of Thomas Hendricks, in Greensburg, and were sworn in by H. H. Talbott, clerk of the countv. through appointment by Governor Jennings. This board was composed of Williams Harlwrd. \\^illiam Parks and Seth Lowe The first action of this board was to divide the county into three township, Fugit, Washington and Adams. The first day of June was then fixed for holding township elections. Superintendents of the school sections were then named as follow: Thomas Thorp, James McLain. Thomas Hen- dricks. Nathaniel Robins and Paul Brown. Enoch McCarty was appointed tax lister and John Hopkins, treasurer. When the three original townships were lai.l off, Fugit township had the same boundaries as at present: save that a strip one and one-halt miles wide and four miles long has since been stricken off and attached to Clinton. Adams township contained all its present territory, and. in addition, a strip 88 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. two miles wide and four miles long, that has since been added to Clay, and all of Clinton except the Fugit strip, above mentioned. The remainder of the count}- lay in Washington township. Even in that earlv day, the high cost oi living was sufficiently asserti\'e to demand attention. The board accordingly fixed the following prices that might be charged by tavern keepers: Rum and wine, fifty cents a half pint; whisky, twenty-five cents a pint; French brandy, fifty cents a half pint; meals, twenty-five cents, and a night's lodging, twent}--five cents. THE BOARD OF JUSTICES. The first board of justices met on September 6, 1824. There were eight members of this board, there then being four townships in the count}'. The board was composed of the following justices of the peace: Robert Church, George \V. Hopkins, James Caldwell. Zachariah Carton, Grift'e Griffiths, Dillard Drake, Edward Turner anfl James Donnell. Other mem- bers of this board, before it passed out of existence in 1831, were ]\Iilton N. Williams, John McCarty, Samuel Bryan, Dan Bell, Robert Cliurcli, Wesley White, J. S. Forsythe, Davis Jewitt, Thomas Hamilton. G. W. Hopkins, W. E. Crawford, \\'illiam Fowler, James Saunders, Alex M. Elliott, William Switzer, J. K Rankin, Benjamin Jones, Ebenezer Douglas, T. C. Pemberton and Thomas Horton. This board was followed by a second group of county commissioners composed of Seth Lowe, a member of the first board, George W. Hopkins and Edward Tanner. Thomas E. Pemberton later filled a vacancy on this board. The most important matter to receive the attention of these early county ofiicials was the location of highways, and many pages are given in the records of their early meetings to such business. This board held its last meeting on January 5, 1835, ^"'^ ^^'^'^s followed by a board of eighteen justices, there then being nine townships in the countw The second board of justices met on March 2, 1835, it being composed of the following: Zachariah Garton, Ezra Lathrop, James Howard, R. M. Jamison, Thomas Powers, John Hazelrigg, Tbeophilus Lee. Samuel Will- iams, James Johnston, David Jewitt, Nathaniel Robins, W. E. Crawford, J. G. Kindall, John Scriptor, John Plymate, Enoch James, Dan Barker and James Lewis. The only new members upon this board in the next twelve years were Henry Critzer, Robert Kennedy, Dan Barker and Ebenezer Douglas. The countv again returning to the board of three comnnssioners in DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 89 1847, the following commissioners were elected: Henry S. Burk, Tom Powers and Seth Lowe, the latter of whom had twice previously been a mem- ber of this body. New members elected in 1850, were Smith Reilly and Barton H. Harney. This board passed out of existence in 1853, following the adoption of the new constitution. Commissioners were then elected as follows: Caleb Stark, Andrew McCoy and William Alagress. Since that time the board of commissioners has managed the business affairs of Decatur county. The present county commissioners are Charles W. Worland, William H. Logan and John W. Tremain. SHERIFF. The office of sheriff has Ijeen an elective one from the beginning of the state and was so provided for by the constitution of 1816. The first sheriff, William Ross, was appointed by the governor when the county was formed, to take charge of the first election. He served only from March until August, 1822. Doddridge Alley was the first elected sheriff. He was fol- lowed by John Parks, who was elected in 1826 and again in 1828. When Parks had collected the ta.xes for the latter year, he bought a large drove of horses and started with them for Lynchburg, \'irginia. He was never heard of afterward. Aljraham Hendricks was apjjointed to ser\'e out his un- expired term. The other incumbents of this office have been : John Thomson, 1829-33 ; James Morgan, 1833-37; Wyatt R. Henderson, 1837-41; Abraham Hen- dricks, 1841-45; Michael Swope, 1845-49; John Imlay, 1849-52 (died in office); John D. Wilson, 1852-53; Joseph V. Bemusdaffer, 1853-57; Ed- ward A. Jocelyn, 1857-61; Philip Mowrer, 1861-65; Charles Sherman, 1865-67; Charles Woodward, 1867-69; Henry Reddington (died before taking office) ; Charles Wooward, 1868-70 (by appointment), Giles E. White, 1870-74; James Fiscus, 1874-76; John A. Meek, 1876-78; Andrew J. Smith, 1878-80; John W. Stout. 1880-84; Merrit C. Welsh, 1884-88; George S. Dickey, i8'88-92; Taylor F. Meek. 1892-96: William T. Stott, 1896-1900; JefT C. Davis, 1900-04; Jacob Biddinger, 1904-08; S. N. Patterson, 1908-12; John W. DeMoss, 1912. TREASURER. General Foley, the first holder of the office, had two opponents at the election, James Johnson, an independent Whig, and Juhn Thompson, the 90 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. regular nominee. Although Foley won the first election in a walk, he was defeated, when he asked for re-election, by Captain James Saunders. Saunders ser\ed one term and declined a renomination. One of the songs of his campaign was: "Get out of the way, ye geese and ganders. Folks can't come it 'gainst Old Jim Saunders." From the time the county was organized until 1S41, the county treasurer was appointed by the county commissioners, or the board of justices, for one year. Since the office was made elective, it has been filled by the following: James B. Foley, 1841 : James Saunders, 1844; Abraham Hendricks, 1847- 50-53-55 : Robert Cones, 1856-58; James Morgan, 1860-62; Thomas B. Perry, 1864; \\'illiam L. Miller, 1866-68; Benjamin F. Henry, 1870; Conway O. Lanham, 1872; Charles Zoller, 1S74: Flenry C. Stockman, 1876-78; Angus M. McCoy, 1880-82; William D. Dailey, 1884-86; John W. Nation, 1888-90; John P. Thompson. 1892-94; Dyar C. Elder, 1896; George P. Shoemaker. 1898-02; George W. Lanham, 1902-06; Oscar B. Trimble, 1906-10; L L. Doles, 1910-12; Albert Boling, 1912-16. RECORDER. CLERK AND AUDITOR. The recorder's office was filled by the county clerk for several years, the clerk also acting as county auditor. Henry H. Talbott performed the triple duties of clerk, auditor and recorder until 1841, in which year the office of auditor was created by the Legislature, after which he continued to act as clerk and recorder until 1859. Successors to him as county clerk have been elected in the following- order: James Gavin. 1863; Ira G. Grover, 1867; John M. Stevens, 1875; Evander F. Dyer, 1879; John G. Garrison, 1883; Jesse M. Thompson, 1887; Alfred Gaines, 1891 ; Marine D. Tackett, 1890; M. C. Jenkins, 1903; J. W. Rhodes, 191 1, and George W. Fraley, 19 15. Putnam Ewing followed Talbott as recorder in 1859 and since that time the office has been filled by the officers whose names follow : James R. Cox, 1863; William B. Harvey, 1867; Edward Kessing, 1875; James E. Mendenhall, 1879; Rufus P. Hamilton, 1885; Aaron Parker, 1895; Marsh Thomas, 1903; Newton Paramore, 191 1 (died in office), and James A. Meek, 1912. County auditors have been elected as follows: .Andrew Dyer, 1841 ; Joseph Remusdaffer, 1855; William H. Reed, 1859; John D. Spillman, DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 91 1863; Frank M. Weadon, 1871 ; John L. Dol)yns, 1875; James Kennedy. 1882; John J. Pnttman. 1890: Coleman T. Pleak. 1894; Frank E. Ryan, 1902: Linton W. Sands, 1910, and John C. Barbe, 1914. Andrew Dyer, the first county auditor, was re-elected three times and held the office for a period of fourteen years and three months. The records do not disclose the reason of this seeming irregularity. Dyer was defeated for a fifth term by Remusdaffer. Of the first eight men who held the office of county auditor, none was a native of Decatur county. Dyer came from Tennessee. Remusdafifer and Weadon from \'irginia, Spillman and Dobyns from Iventucky, Reed from I<"ranklin county, Kennedy from Union county and Puttman from Riplev county. STATE SENATORS. Decatur county has been represented in the state Senate since 1825, on which year it was served by James Gregorj^ who represented se\'en other counties. It had no senator of its own until 1836, by which time it had so increased in population that it was given separate representation in the upper house of the Legislature. This continued until 1869, when, in order to maintain an equitable representation in the Senate, the county was again thrown into a joint-senatorial district. Decatur county has had the following representation in the state Senate : 1825-6 — James Gregory, joint senator, liamilton, Marion, Madison, Henry, Shelby, Decatur, Rush and Johnson counties. 1826-7-S — James Gregory, joint senator, Decatur, Shelby, Johnson and Morgan counties. 1829 — James Gregory, joint senator, Decatur, Shelby and Morgan counties. 1830 — James Gregory, joint senator, Decatur, Shelby and Johnson counties. 183 1-2-3 — Thomas Hendricks, joint senator, Shelby and Decatur counties. 1834-5 — William Fowler, joint senator, Shelby and Decatur counties. 1836 — William Fowler, senator, Decatur county. 1837-45 — James Morgan, senator, Decatur county. 1846-S — Joseph Robinson, senator, Decatur county. 1849-50 — James Morgan, senator, Decatur county. 185 1 — Robert H. Crawford, senator, Decatur county. 1853-5 — ^^'- J- Robinson, senator, Decatur county. 92 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 1857 — John F. Stevens, senator, Decatur county. *t 1 858-59 — J. F. Stevens, senator, Decatur county. *ti86i — Richard Robins, senator, Decatur county. 1863 — Joseph Pleak, senator, Decatur county. *ti865 — Dan R. Van Buskirk, senator, Decatur county. 1867 — Will I'uniback, senator, Decatur county. *ti869 — William J. Robinson, joint senator. Rush and Decatur counties. 1871 — William J. Robinson, joint senator. Rush and Decatur counties. *ti872-5 — George B. Sleeth, joint senator. Rush and Decatur counties. *ti877-9 — ^^'illianl A. Moore, joint senator. Rush and Decatur counties. *ti8'Si — Francis M. Howard, joint senator, Decatur and Shelby counties. 1883 — Francis M. Howard, joint senator, Decatur and Shelby counties. *ti885 — Francis M. Howard, joint senator, Decatur and Shelby counties. 1887 — Francis M. Howard, joint senator, Decatur and Shelby counties. 1889 — S. J. Carpenter, joint senator, Decatur and Shelby bounties. 1891 — Cortez Ewing. joint senator, Decatur and Shelby counties. 1893-5 — Albert E. ^Vray, joint senator, Decatur and Shelby counties. 1897 — Everett F. Stroup, joint senator, Decatur and Shelby counties. 1 899-1901 — A\'. W. Lambert, joint senator. Bartholomew and Decatur counties. 1903-5 — M. E. Xe\\house, joint senator, Bartholomew and Decatur counties. 1907-9 — W'illiam E. Springer, joint senator, Bartholomew and Decatur counties. 1911-13 — Emanuel Trautman, joint senator, Bartholomew and Decatur counties. 191 5 — E. A. Norman, joint senator, Bartholomew and Decatur counties. *Special session. fRegular session. STATE REPRESENT.\TIVES. Being organized by the Session Laws of 1821, Decatur cuuntv first secured representation in the House of Representatives of the state Legisla- ture in its eighth session, 1823. It has since been served by representatives, by joint representatives and by both. The representation of the county in the lower house has been as follows : 1823-5 — Thomas Hendricks, joint representative. Rush, Decatur, Shelby and Henrv counties. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 93 1825-6 — Thomas R. Stanford, joint representative, Rush, Henry, Decatur and Shelby counties. 1826- — Doddridge Ally, representative, Decatur county. 1827-30 — Thomas Hendricks, representative, Decatur county. 1831 — Doddridge Ally, representative, Decatur county. 1832-3 — William Fowler, representative, Decatur county. 1834-5 — Samuel Bryan, representati\'e, Decatur county. 1836-7 — James Elder, representative, Decatur county. 1838 — Abram Hendricks, representative, Decatur county. 1839 — Martin Jamison, representative, Decatur county. 1840 — James Blair, representative, Decatur county. 1841 — James Saunders, representative, Decatur county. 1842-3 — James Montague, representative, Decatur county. 1844 — Ralph Robinson, representative, Decatur county. 1845 — William J. Robinson, representative, Decatur county. 1846 — P. Hamilton, representative, Decatur county. 1847 — Philander Hamilton, representative, Decatur county. 1848 — James Morgan, representative. Decatur county. 1849 — William J. Robinson, representative, Decatur county. 1850 — Robert H. Crawford, representative, Decatur county. 185 1 — John Stevens, representative, Decatur county. 1853 — Alex. L. Underwood, representative, Decatur county. 1855 — Samuel A. Bonner, representative, Decatur county. 1857 — Davis Batterton, representative, Decatur county. *ti858-59 — William J. Robinson, representative, Decatur county. *ti86i — Ira C. Grover. representative, Decatur county. 1863 — Daniel A'an Buskirk, representative, Decatur county. *ti865 — William H. Bonner, representative, Decatur county. 1867 — William A. Moore, representative. Decatur county. *ti869 — Oliver P. Gilham. representative: David M. Stewart, joint representative ; Decatur and Rush cour.ties. 1871 — William T. Strickland, representative: Benjamin T. Hill, joint representative: Decatur and Rush counties. *i872-73 — George Goudie, representative: John D. Miller, joint repre- sentative; Decatur and Rush counties. *ti875 — John W. Shaw, representative: Barker Brown, joint represen- tative ; Ripley. Rush and Decatur counties. *ti877 — Zachariah T. Riley, representative: Arch ;\I. Kennedy, joint representative: Ripley, Rush and Decatur counties. 94 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. *ti879 — John S. Donnell. representative; Chester E. Faulkner, joint representative : Ripley, Rush and Decatur counties. *ti<^8i — James B. Robinson, representative, Decatur county. i883-^Oscar L. Pulse, representative, Decatur county. *ti885 — Erastus L. Floyd, representative, Decatur county. 1887 — William R. Pleak. representative, Decatur county. 1889 — James B. Robinson, representative, Decatur county. 1 89 1 — Jacob L. Doll, representative, Decatur county. 1893-5 — IMarshal Newhouse, representative, Decatur county. 1897 — William H. Goddard, representative, Decatur county. 1899 — John W. Holcomlj, representative, Decatur county. 1901 — Noah T. Rogers, representative, Decatur county. 1903 — Henry B. Sherman, representative, Decatur county. 1905-7 — \A'ebb Woodfill, representative, Decatur county. 1909 — Jethro C. Meek, representative, Decatur county. 1911 — S. B. Eward, representative, Decatur county. 1913-15 — W. J. Kincaid. representative, Decatur county. *Special session. fRegular session. CHAPTER V. TOWNSHIPS AND TOWNS OF DF.CATUR COUNTY. The townships of Decatur county were organized by the county board in the following order: Washington, May 14, 1822; Fugit, May 14, 1822; Adams, May 14, 1822; Sand Creek, May 2, 1825; Clinton, July 6, 1829; Marion, May 3, 1831; Jackson, in March 1S34; Clay, March 3, 1836; Salt Creek, September 6, 1836. ADAMS TOWNSHIP. On May 14, 1822, the county commissioners established Adams town- ship with the following limits: Beginning at the county line on the township line dividing townships 10 and 11, range 8, thence east with the township line to the line dividing sections 32 and 33, range 9, township 1 1 ; thence north to the southwest corner of section 21 in the town and range aforesaid; thence east to the southwest corner of section 2^, range 9, township 1 1 ; thence north with the section line to the southwest corner (jf section 14, thence east to the southwest corner of section 17, range 10, township 11; thence north with the section line to the county line ; thence west with the county line to the northwest corner of said county; thence south with the county line to the place of beginning. This was one of the three original t'lwnships laid out in the county, and has been cut down three different times : First, by the formation of Clay township in 1825, sections 2y, 26, 25, 30, 34. 35, 36 and 31, township 11, range 8, being cut off to give Clay its present size ; second, when Clinton township was formed, Adams suft'ering the loss of fourteen whole sections and five half-sections, townshi]) ti, range 9, as follow: 2^, 24, 14, 13. 18, II, 12, 7, 2, I, 6, 35, 31 and the half sections, 34, 3, 10, 15 and 22; third, two sections, 19 and 20, township 11, range 9, were added to Washington township. This left the limits of Adams rather ill defined and after the last cut was made from this township, is found the following extract in the minutes of the commissioners" records: Adams township limits (Vol. i, page 135) : "On May 2, 1825, the limits of Adams township were rede- fined by the board of justices as follows : Beginning at the county line on the 96 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. range line dividing ranges 9 and 10: thence south ii\-e miles to the southeast corner of section 24, range 9, township 1 1 ; thence west to the county h'ne ; thence with the county hue to the place of beginning." THE SQUATTER. Prior to 1818 a small portion of southeastern Indiana, only, had Ijeen purchased from the Indians and partiall}- settled. In that year a treaty was concluded with various tribes uf Indians, by which most of the land in the interior of the state, south of the Wabash river and not previously purchased, was deeded to the United States. Immediately, emigrants began to push their way into the "New Purchase," as it was called. The lands were not yet sur- veyed nor ready for sale; still, choice selections could Ije made preparatory to purchase when the land should be offered for sale — the "squatter," in the meantime, clearing a small piece of ground in some eligible situation, where he hoped soon to buy. This small tract, with the game, which was abundant, produced sufficient to satisfy his wants. THE FIRST SETTLER. The first white man to take up his abode in .Vdams townshij) is believed to have been John Gullion. He came from Switzerland county, and was an old Revolutionary soldier — said to have been perfectly irrepressible and uncontrollable in battle. He had been shot through the cheek and mouth in some of the battles of that war, and was greatly disfigured. It is belie\'ed he visited the country above Big Flatrock in the fall of 1818, ])uilding a "shanty" and, perhaps, clearing some ground in the bottom near where the Michigan road crosses that stream. In the spring of 1819 he mo\ed his family and took up his pennanent residence. In the same spring, Abraham Heaton set- tled about one mile further up that stream. He cleared land and raised a crop of corn in the bottom just below the mouth of Little Flatrock, in what in later years has been known as the Manley Kimble bottom. In November, 1819, Edward Tannor arrived and settled on the school section near where Nelson Jewett now lives, building a shanty and covering it with bark taken from an abandoned Indian shanty near by. In the spring of 1820, Heaton was joined by Peter Zeigler and Philip Isley, who raised a crop of corn in the same bottom, buying corn of Heaton of the previous year's raising, at one dollar in siher per bushel. The Miami tribe of Indians were still in the countrv. The new settlers DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 97 hunted with them, and lixed im terms of mutual friendship. Tn the fah of 1820, the land, having been surveyed, was offered for sale at Brookville. Abraham Heaton bought one hundred and sixty acres where he had located. Peter Zeigler bought one hundred and sixty acres, which was soon after- ward sold to Martin Adkins, and is now owned by Joseph D. Pleak. He also bought one hundred and sixty acres just west of the present site of St. Omer, on which he li\'ed until within a few years. Jonathan McCarty bought one hundred and sixty acres where the Michigan road crosses Big Flatrock; J. M. Robison, two hundred and forty acres immediately south of McCarty's, and Mr. Sanford, one hundred and sixty acres east of the same. Jonathan Paul entered a half section or more at the falls of Mill creek, near to the present St. Paul, and was one of the first, if not the very first, to erect a mill in the count}'. Col. W. W. Pearce entered one hundred and sixty acres one mile northwest of St. Omer, on the Michigan road, and William Peterson, one hundred and sixty acres just east of the present site of St. Omer. John Shelhorn entered lands between Big and IJttle Flatrock, and erected a mill on the latter stream alxnit the time, or soon after, that Paul built on Mill creek. Of course, these were small affairs compared with modern mills. They were devoted mostly to grinding corn, but were provided with bolts which were turned by hand and each customer had to turn his own grist. SHATTERED HOPES. Shelhorn also, in iSji, laid off a town on the blulf immediately aljove the confluence of Big and Little Flatrock, called Rockville, which was the first town laid off in the county. The county line not yet having been established nor the county seat located, it was hoped to make it a county seat. The town i)lat is recorded at Brook^•ille, and the only e\"idence of its existence in our records is in the records of deeds to certain lots — Main street and Broadway being given as part of the boundary. The site was a beautiful one for a town, but, failing to be made a county seat, all further effort to build up a town was abandoned. David Jewett entered a considerable tract of land just east of Shelhorn, on Little I^'latrock. Daniel Stoggsdill arrived either in the fall of 1820, or very early in 1821, and was the first minister of the gospel in this section of the country. His home was in the corner of Washington township, yet the church which he founded, and to which for a long time he ministered, was in Adams, with whose people he would be more properlv classed than (7) 98 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. anywhere else. The same may be said of Richard Guthrie, who settled in 182 1, in the corner of Clay, just below the present town of Adams. Solo- mon Turpin entered one hundred and sixty acres of land on Clifty, where the Michigan road crosses that stream, and Jonas Long, it is believed, the same year entered eighty acres one mile farther west, just east of the present town of Adams. Rew Joel Clark entered lands in the east part of the town- ship in 182 1, where Phillip Martin subsequently lived. He was a Baptist minister and quite an old man at that time. His son, Austin Clark, was a Methodist e.xhorter and, in connection with Jonathan Tindale, who came at the same time, established the first Methodist society in the township. Archi- bald Clark, a brother of Austin, settled on Little Flatrock, near the center of the township. Joseph Lee came in the fall of this year and settled on the school section. Enoch ^IcCarty, Hershon Lee, Daniel Howard, and perhaps others^ were in the county, but had not at this date, entered lands with a jjros- pect of becoming- permanent residents. Enoch James, a young man who had accompanied a family to whicli he was related, was the first to procure a marriage license in the township, and, it is beHe\ed, in the county. He was married in the spring of 1S22. EARLY MAIL F.ACILITIES. Jonathan McCarty and Edward Tannor were the first justices of the peace, elected in 1823. The first postoffice was established in 1822, or 1823: ^\'. W. Pierce was postmaster. The mails were carried on horseback from Lawrenceburgh to Lidianapolis, once in two weeks, and afterwards weekly. The streams were all unbridged, and in times of high water, which sometimes continued for weeks, the mail carrier had no means of crossing but to swim. A canoe was usually kept at the crossing, and sometimes he would go over in that with the mail bags, swimming the horse by the side of the canoe ; but if the canoe happened to be on the other side, or no one could be found to row it, he would plunge boldly in, protecting the mail bags as best he could. Samuel Frazier was for a long time the carrier, a good-natured, lively voung fellow, and, let the weather or streams be what they would, he seldom failed to get the mails through on time. He was long remembered by the old set- tlers on that route. PRIMITIVE CONDITIONS. This sketch would be imperfect if it did not give some idea of the state of the countr\' and of the difficulties these first settlers had to encounter, DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 99 yet no description can give to one who never saw the country in its native wildness, any just conception of what it was. Half the country seemed to be under water, hence settlers mostly selected lands near water courses, where, the lands being more broken, dryer situations could be found. In passing from Flatrock to Clift}', in the spring of the year, and sometimes a good part of the year, water from one to three feet deep would have to be waded for near half the distance, the scene being enlivened by the croaking of innumerable frogs, and occasionally by a deer which went bounding through, or over, the thickets of spice and other underbrush. Of roads there were none that deser\-ed the name. Wilsoii's "trace," from Napoleon through by the present site of Greensburg and on to Flat- rock, and perhaps farther west ; Freel's "trace," which, branching off from the former at the big fallen timber, ran through by the forks of Clifty and on to Conners\-ille ; and another from Brook\ille, through or near the present town of Clarksburg and on to the settlements on Clifty and Flatrock, were the roads followed by settlers. The trees along the route were merely "blazed," and a few brushes cut out. The logs that could be easily removed were taken from the track, and others were frequently crossed by piling chunks on each side which enabled the teams to draw the wagons over. There were no mills in the country, and meal was made by pounding corn in a mortar. This was made by burning a hole a foot or so deep in a solid sugartree, beech or other log, setting this up on end and erecting over this something exactly like a well sweep, only, in place of rope or chain to attach to a bucket, was a pole with the butt end down, and fitted nicely to the shape of the mortar. A small jiortion of corn was put in at a time and pounded till sufficiently fine, and the coarse parts removed by a sieve. This process, hard and tedious as it was, was easier for most than going to mill — the most convenient Ijeing four miles below Brookville. Colonel Pierce, who was the first to sow wheat in the township, and perhaps in the county, that being in the fall of 1821, was compelled to go to that distance to get it ground — taking two days to go and two to come back. EARLY WEARING APP.VREL. It was some vears before a store was established in the township, the nearest being Benson's, where Spring Hill now is, and at Arthur ^Major's, two or three miles below the present St. Paul. But very little store goods sufiiced in that day; all articles of wear were home-made: spinning and weaving were a part of the regular employment of the women of every lOO DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. household, wool being carded into rolls for spinning bv hantl. and flax was frequently jiartly prepared for spinning h\- the same hands; some, before flax could be raised, substituted nettles, which grew luxuriantl_\- on bottom land to the height of three or four feet ; when thev had lain sufficiently long to l)ecoine rotted, they were prepared the same as flax, and made a very good article of linen. Garments were made with but little regard to fashion. The men sometimes wore what was called a hunting-shirt, fringed round the edges with red or blue fringes, and a coonskin cap, with the striped tail hanging clown the back — these being the onl}- eft'orts at style. The women wore dresses of home-made linsey, or linen striped with indigo or copperas color, to suit the taste, exactly such as can be seen at the present day worn by emigrants from the mountainous regions of Ten- nessee and North Carolina. Deerskins were, after a home tanning, con- verted into moccasins. Some of the more well-to-do aspired to shoes ( boots were not thought of), but one pair usually lasted a good while, and so care- ful were the girls of their shoes, that it was the custom, when they went to meeting, to carry their shoes and stockings in their hands, putting them on only when they arrived within a short distance of the meeting-house. Hats were frequently made of buckeye splits, plaited and sewn together, and were quite a stylish article when new, the only draw-back being that after two or three wettings they turned a mouldy, dirty-looking brown color that was anything but handsome. Wolves, though not very nmnerous, were still troublesome to those who attempted to keep sheep. Rattlesnakes were abundant, and, though a source of great dread, yet accidents from this source were not frequent. On one occasion about seventy were killed in one day near Paul's mill, where they had crawled out from their den in the rocks. This was considened rather better than an ordinary day for snakes. Horses were turned out, after work, to range in the forest, as it was impossible to procure food otherwise, the precaution being taken to fasten a bell to the neck in order that they might l)e easily found in the morning. But. as the season advanced, the malaria from the swamps, coujiled with the continued hardship and exposure, began to tell on the settlers, and nearly all were afflicted with chills and fever. Some continued to shake until Christ- mas, others recovering in a few days or weeks ; sometimes they were scarcely well enough to attend the sick, yet \'ery few cases were fatal, whether from the mildness of the malady or the scarcity of doctors, it would be impossible to tell. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. lOI WILD GAME. One year was noted for a wonderful l^eech mast. This brought in the pigeons by the niilhons, squirrels also, and the wild turkeys in vast numbers. It was no uncommon thing to see the whole heavens covered for hours at a time, like a cloud, with pigeons going to the roost in the evening or return- ing in the morning. Squirrels were so thick as to, in some instances, destroy whole fields of corn in the fall ; the trees left standing gave them shelter, so that they ravaged all parts of the field alike. Squirrel hunts were some- times made to try to exterminate them, and it was not uncommon for one man to kill one hundred and fifty in a day. Turkeys, too, were so abundant that frequently only the breast was saved to dry, the balance of the carcass, though fat and fine, being thrown away. Hogs nndtiplied rapidlv and, feed being abundant in the woods, they soon sought their living there alto- gether, and became as wild as the deer. Almost everyone had wild hogs in the woods and those who had not, bought a real or pretended claim from someone else; these claims never ran out or became worthless while the hogs lasted, there being no first mortgages to come in, as in later times, to swallow up all minor interests. In the fall or beginning of winter it was the custom to go to the woods, strike a camp, and hunt and kill wild hogs till enough were secured for the year's supply. The hogs, being almost wholly unmarked, few could tell their own from others, nor did they seem at all particular, the fact that one had a claim being thought sufficient to justify him in taking the first he came to. DISTILLERIES. The temperance reformation bail not yet commenced and all classes used whiskey as a regular beverage. To supply this want, whiskey being thought indispensable, still-houses were very early erected, and there have been as many as six in a township, though not all in operation at one time. They have long since disappeared, yet their influence probably long sur- vived theuL PIONEER SCHOOLS. Amidst all disadvantages, the interests of education, morality and re- ligion were not wholly neglected. Rude school houses were put up by the voluntarv aid of contiguous neighbors. A log was usually cut out of the wall on one side and over this greased paper was pasted, this serving for a I02 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. window. Under this was the writing-desk — a board laid on pins, driven in the wall ; and the seats were split puncheons, without backs. The teachers, sometimes, verv w'ell matched the school house, while some would compare A'ery well with those of the present day. People with such rude surround- ings sometimes gained a very good practical knowledge of arithmetic, going clear through and doing eveiy sum in a single quarter, a feat that under modern teaching is seldom accomplished under three or four, so little do the surroundings of a scholar ha^'c to do with his advancement. The present officers of Adams township are : Trustee, L. A. Jewett ; assessor, Ed Shower ; advisory board, William Larrigan, J. S. Townsend and Manford Slifer; road supervisors, Ed Hoffman, T. M. Favor, George Smith and Thomas Teitsort. ST. OMER. The little village of St. Omer is located in section 2. Adams township, and appeared on the horizon for the first time in 1834, when it was laid out by John Griffin and A. Major. It is on the old Michigan road and was for- merly an important trading center of Adams township. Scattered along either side of the famous old thoroughfare, which is the main street of the little village, may be seen quaint okl cottages, once the home of happy and contented people. The first building in the town dates from 1830. The Michigan road was once an Indian trail which wound its way through this countrv, and, from the opening of the "New Purchase" to settlement, the trail became the main road from the southeastern part of the state to the new capital at Indianapolis, \^'ith the opening of the ^Michigan road by government and state aid, in the early part of the thirties, ta\erns sprang up at intervals throughout its entire length, and these taverns, in many in- stances, became the centers of hopeful villages. In St. Omer may still be seen a few buildings \vhich were once used as taverns. The Wilder prop- erty was once such a tavern. VISIONS OF R.\ILR0ADS. In the early forties, St. Omer began to see visions of a railroad, but the vision was all the people ever saw. The present Big Four was first planned to run through the village, but subsequent sur\-eys showed that it would miss the town by about two miles. Another projected road which was to pass through St. Omer was a line from Greensburg, part of which was actually graded. Howexer, this line never materialized, and since that time the town DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 103 has given up hopes of ever having a railmad. This projected road explains the huge cuts and fills which may still be seen along the Michigan road be- tween Greensburg and Shelbyville. The work had even proceeded so far that part of the abutments for the bridge across Flatrock were in place. Thousands of dollars were expended, to say nothing of the time and labor and lilasted hopes. An interesting incident connected with this visionary railroad was a clan feud between the Irish laborers of Shelbyville and those stationed at St. Omer. So bitter became tliis strife that they took their old flint-lock muskets with them to their work day after day and stacked their arms along the right of way, to be used in case trouble might arise. Several skirmishes actually occurred and some blood was shed, but there were no fatalities. Few people know that the timber was prepared for the construction of a depot in St. Omer, but such was the case. The depot was to stand on a spot just south of the later residence of Wesley Wilder, but when it was decided to change the route of the railroad, the timbers were hauled to St. Paul and became a part of the residence of Joseph Eck. So much for the railroad history of St. Omer. EDUCATION. The subscription school furnished all of the education for the young- sters of St. Omer laefore the adoption of the new Constitution in 1851. \^^len the system of free schools came into operation, in that year, St. Omer was divided between two school districts, one school house being in the \'illage and the other in the woods near where John Leach later lived. This did not prove satisfactory and in 1856 the citizens of the \illage secured a graded school and placed it in the hands of Franklin Pearce and Samantha Mann, the mother of Dr. E. Jewett. A few weeks after school began, Mr. Pearce was hit on the head with a stick of wood in the hands of one of his pupils, and killed. Whether it was accidental or intentional, is uncertain. The school was one of the best in this section of the state at the time. Latin, German, algeljra, music and other higher branches were included in the curriculum. The present school building was erected in 1879. CHURCHES. There have been three churches in St. Omer, the ISIethodist Episcopal, Presbvterian and L'nited Brethren. The Presbvterian church was destroved I04 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Ijy fire se\eral years ago and ne\'er rebuilt, tradition saying that the cliurch was burned as the result of some courageous preacher pointing out in too plain a manner the future destiny of a certain young man whose agricultural efforts were devoted to the sowing of the wrong kind of oats. The history of the other churches is given elsewhere in this \-olume. St. Omer has ne\er boasted of a large population and today can scarcely claim o\er half a hundred. There were ne\er anj- factories of any import- ance in the village, but from the earliest history of its career there were artisans capable of supplying most of the local wants. Plows, wagons, sad- dles and harness, hats, beds and many other articles have been made here in a small way. Coopers, butchers, blacksmiths, wood-workers, carpenters, and even tailors, have pursued their trade here in the past. At one time there were four general stores, two drug stores, a hotel or two, and the ubiquituous saloon in St. Omer, and all of them appeared to thrive. John F. Harwood opened the first hotel and Harvey X'aupelt established the first store. Today there is not a single store in the village, the pro.ximity of St. Paul, two miles away, having made it impossible for a local merchant to continue in business. A COUNTY-SEAT PROSPECT. The history of this once prosperous little hamlet cannot be dismissed without mentioning an interesting dream of its former inhabitants. Before the Civil War, St. Omer entertained aspirations of being a county seat. A project, fathered by soine politicians, proposed to make a new county out of parts of Decatur, Shelby and Rush counties, with St. Omer as the county . seat. However, so much opposition was encountered that the proposal ne\er did anything more than raise the linpes of the guileless people of St. Omer. The promoters of the new county ex-en went so far as to select the site for the new court house, the site being located across the road and west of Smith's garage. The failure of the new-county scheme and the shifting of the railroad, two miles to the west, was the death-knell of St. Omer. Its oldest citizens can still tell of the halcyon days when they fondly imagined great things for the town. They planned for its future with every confi- dence in the promises of the railroad people, and likewase gave e\-ery encouragement to the county-seat proposal — but, alas, it was all in vain. ADAMS. The village of Adams is situated on the Big Four railroad and also the interurban line. It is only five miles from Greensburg and in the extreme DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. IO5 southern part of the township hearing the same name. The village was laid out by Aaron H. Womack, January i, 1855, two years after the completion of the railroad through this township. It is located in the center of a rich agricultural district and, although there has been a great falling off in the population of some of the smaller towns since the general influ.x to the cities began, Adams has continued to grow. "Sir. Womack was the first merchant in the village, although William Gouldsl)ury is credited as being the first settler. Mr. Gouldslniry erected the first residence in the town and also established the first industrial enterprise in the form of a Ijlacksmith shop and wagon works. Around this nucleus soon gathered a prosperous settle- ment of industrious, intelligent and progressive people. Adams was incorporated in September, 1877, for school purposes, but the school was taught only one term under corporate management. Confu- sion and jealousies arising among the officers and citizens, it was determined, by a unanimous vote, to abolish the corporation and return to the manage- ment of the township trustee. The business interests of Adams in 191 5 are as follows: Auctioneer, A. F. Eubank ; barber, George Baumgartner ; blacksmith, J. S. Hichney and I N. Con, John Inman, Charles Adkins; boarding house, Mrs. ^Mae Long- street ; contractor, James Inman ; elevator, Albert Boling ; general merchan- dise, Arthur Toothman, J. J. Mull, Walter Marshall; implements, L. R. Davis; livery, William Jackson; meat market, A. R. Coy; physician, M. A. Tremain; paper hanger, Ed Shauer; restaurant and confectionery, A. R. Coy ; veterinary, Morton Tanner. Adams has a well organized band of fifteen members, with Justin Guthrie as leader. The}- were organized in the winter of 1913 and have two thousand dollars invested in instruments. This band has recently pur- chased new uniforms and renders concerts during the summer months for the entertainment of the townspeople. Adams is accommodated lay the Big Four railroad, with A. R. Coy as agent, and also the electric line, with Arthur Toothman as agent. Grace Jackson is the present postmistress. The town has a population of four hun- dred people. DOWNEYVILLE. Downeyville is a small hamlet in .\dams township. This village was never platted and, although the name covers considerable space on the county map, there are only four or five houses in the cluster that marks the town limits. The business interests, which consist of a general store, are con- ducted by J. E. Downey & Sons. I06 DECATUR C0U>;TY, INDIANA. ROCKVILLE, A PROSPEROUS COUNTY SEAT. Few of the present generation know that the first town laid out within the present Hmits of Decatur county was located in Adams township. Shortly after land in the "Xew Purchase" was offered for sale at Brook- \ille, Al)raham Heaton bought one hunilred and sixty acres in section 6 of Adams township. In the early part of the following year John Shelhorn entered a tract in the same section and these two men conceived the idea of laying out a town above the confluence of Big and Little Flatrock. The county of Decatur had not }et Iieen organized and no one, of course, knew how much territory the new county might include. Heaton and Shelhorn hoped to induce the authorities to select the site of their proposed town for the county seat and when they laid out their town provided for a public square. On the Franklin county records ma}- still be seen the town of Rock- \'ille, which these two enterprising Yankees laid out in the early spring of 1 82 1. The plat was recorded at Brookville, February 19, 1821 (Deed record E, page 76), and shows one hundred and eight lots. The streets were one chain in width and seventy-five links in length. The plat shows the following streets : Main, Broadway, Walnut, \\'ater, Mulberry and Market. \\"hile the site was a beautiful one, the proprietors never realized anything from their patriotic efforts to make it a town. During the following year the locating commissioners placed the county seat of the new county at Greens- burg and thus blasted any hopes that Heaton and Shelhorn might have en- tertained for their town. The present town of Downeyville is in the neigh- borhood of this long-forgotten, prospective county seat of Decatur county. ST. PAUL. The town of St. Paul came into existence at the time the Big Four railroad was built through Decatur county, in 1853. The town is on the line l^etween Decatur and Shelby counties, although the greater part of the town is in Decatur county. Jonathan Paul was the first settler to locate on the present site of St. Paul, entering all of section 33, township 11, range 8, e.xcept eighty acres ; the patent for this large tract being dated October 20, 1820. The Pauls came from JetTerson county, Indiana, where one of the members of the family had laid out the town of Madison. A sister of Jona- than Paul became the wife of William Hendricks, congressman. United States senator and governor of Indiana. OLI> HOTSH MIM., XKAK CKKKXSIUIK i OLDEST Itni.l.lXG IN ST. VWI.. I'.riLT I'.Y JOIIX I'. I'.UI. AUOIT ls.-,4 AND STILL STANDING. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 107 The original Paul home in Adams township, Decatur county, was a log cabin near the road, at the foot of the present Paul Hill cemetery, at St. Paul. There was a semblance of a village many years before the town was la'id out. the hamlet being known as Paultown. The older residents still speak of the place as Paultown, but few of the present generation are aware of the first name. The first Paul cabin Ijurned a few )-ears after it was erected and another log structure was Iniilt on the same spot, which ser\-ed as a home for the family until the erection of a sul)stantial brick building. The contract for the erection of the brick house was let to Daniel French, who made the brick near where the house was built. The evidence of this worthy con- tractor's work still stands in St. Paul and bids fair to stand for many years yet to come. Shortly after getting his first cabin erected, Paul established a rude mill on Mill creek, a short distance above where the later Paul mill stood. This first mill — and it was probably the first mill in the county — was not much larger than a smoke-house, but it served the purpose for which it was built. He ground only corn and this was done in an old-fashioned hand "hopper." A few years after Jonathan Paul put his first mill into operation, his son, John Paul, built another mill a short distance below the old mill and operated it by water-power. Sometime later John Paul saw that there was an excellent water-power site at the confluence of Mill creek and Flatrock and proceeded to build a woolen-mill on the west side of Mill creek near where it empties into Flatrock. He built a dam across Mill creek and the race which he constructed may still be seen. John Paul also had a saw-mill near the same place, deriving his power for its operation from Flatrock. The two mills were close together and it was his original intention to utilize the same race for both mills, but such a plan was found impracticable. These two mills gave employment to several men and were the means of attractmg a number of families to the little hamlet of Paultown, or "Bull Town," as it was frequently called. In the spring of 1847 the two mills were swept away by a flood and Paul also saw his dam across Flatrock disappear at the same time. RAILROAD BOOMS THE TOWN. From 1847 to 1854 was a period of depression in the once thriving vil- lage, but with the building of the railroad through the place in the latter year, things began to look more auspicious. Paul rebuilt his mill, and, with the assistance of his son-in-law, Erastus M. Flo\-tl, laid out the town into I08 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. lots ; giving it at the same time, the name of St. Paul. From that time forward the town had prospered and toda_\- is one of the hest trading centers in the count}-. By 185CJ the town had increased in population until fnat year saw the erection of thirty buildings. According to a local account, there were the following enterprises in St. Paul in 1859: Alerchants — Caldwell & Dorse\', Drummond tS: Buell, Ridlin & Company. John DeArmond and Benjamin Jenkins : steam and water mills — George Wooden : cabinet shop — Hann & Raymond ; two hotels ; woolen factory — John Paul, and a number of other industries. A word should be said regarding the old Paul mill, which no longer greets the eve of the fisherman as he wanders along Mill creek in search of chubs and slickjacks. Amateur photographers no longer compete in efforts to get the liest pictures of the Ijuilding, with its quaint overshot wheel. The old mill was razed in 1909 and nothing now remains of an industry which was once a boom to the settlers who flocked from far and near to take their turns in getting their grist ground. Never again will the curious gather to watch the water, freed from the race by the lifting of the old water gate, rush down over the wheel and fill the buckets. The hum of the old French burrs is silenced forever; no more will the youth of the village, stripped to the skin, stand under the falls of the race overflow ; no more will boys borrow the iild miller's spade, with which to dig worms when fishing in the old mill race ; no more will they parch corn on the top of the old box-stove, fired with colis, and listen to the miller's stories of pioneer days. SCHOOLS AND CHURCHES. The first school house in St. Paul stood on the site of the store now owned by the Ilenning Brothers, and the second one was located where Walter Hungerford's residence now stands. School was also held for a time in the second story of Oddfellow hall, now the carriage and buggy fac- tory of Jacob Johannes. During the early seventies a school was main- tained in l)oth the Methodist and Catholic churches. After leaving Odd- fellow hall, the public school was stationed in the building now owned by Henry Xeidigh, which was also used for religious purposes at the same time. In 1870 the school district built a school house about one hundred feet back of where the present school building now stands. This building was used until it was destroyed by fire in 1901, and, until the completion of the present building in the following year, the Floyd building was used for school purposes. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. IO9 The first church Imilding dates from 1857 when the different deudmi- nations of the town erected wliat they called a union church, luich denom- ination interested in the erection of this edifice was to be allowed to use it at regular intervals, but it seems that, owing to the predominance of the Lutherans, it was commonly known as the Lutheran church. However, other denominations used it for services for a few years. Just wlien the Lutherans gained complete control of the building is not known ; but it is certain that it was unused se\-eral years previous to the time the Christian church got possession of it in 1X74. 'Ihe Christians seemed to have rented it until 1892 when they purchased it and made many extensive improvements in it. The Methodists built about 1858 and the Catholics in the same year. The first IMethodist church Inirned in 1892 and in the same year the present church was erected. The Catholics are still using the church they built in 1858. INDUSTRIES AND COMMERCE. The stone industry in St. Paul was started in the 'fifties by John Scan- Ian, who established a stone cjuarry south of town, which gave employment to a large number of men. Later, William Lowe established a cpiarry at the junction of Mill creek and Flatrock, on the site of the old woolen-mill. Later H. C. Adams opened a quarry opposite the Lowe quarry on Flatrock. Li 191 3 P. J. McAuliffe, who had leased the Lowe quarry, some years previoush', closed the quarry as a result of the extensive damages suffered by the ]\Iarch flood of that year. In 1907 Greely Brothers built a large stone crusher on Flatrock east of town. This is one of the largest concerns of its kind in Lidiana and produces from fifteen to twenty car loads of crushed stone daily. In addition to crushed stone for road material, a large amount of what is locally known as "dimension"' stone is quarried. This stone ranks second in the state to Bedford stone and is shipped for building purposes all over the United States. It was used in the construction of the custom house at Cincinn.ati and in the state house at Indianapolis. The onlv other industry of any importance now in St. Paul is the bugg}' factory of Jacob Johannes. This was established by the present proprietor in 1878 and has been in continuous operation since that year. Formerly carriages were manufactured as well as buggies, but at the present time only buggies are made. The factory has an annual capacity of one hundred buggies and on an average of se\-enty-five are now made each year. Only first-class vehicles are turned out and the product finds a ready sale, despite tlie heavy inroads which the automobile has made in the vehicle industry. In addition no DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. to the manufacture of Ijuggies, Mr. Johannes does a large amount of repair work. The first merchant in St. Paul was a man by the name of Hungate, who sold a little of everything, as was the custom in those days. The busi- ness enterprises of the town change from year to year, and scarcely a year passes that there is not some change in firms. New enterprises are being added from vear to year, and it is impossible to predict what a new year will bring forth. .-V survey of the business and professional interests of St. Paul in the summer of 1915 discloses the following: Automobiles, St. Paul Hardware Company ; bakery, St. Paul Baking Company ; barbers, Jacob Wise, William Favors, Carl Brooks; blacksmiths. Merritt Copeland, ^lanlief & McAulitTe; buggy factory, Jacob Johannes; building and loan association, George W. Boling, secretary; bank, St. Paul Banking Co., Orlando Hungerford, owner; cement products, Joseph Eck ; carpenters, George W. Swartz, Albert Hay- mond, Miller Brothers; dentist, Leslie Rivers; drugs. Dr. 1). J. Ballard, H. H. Gladish : ele\-ator, William Xading; feed and milling products, \V. T. Boiling; flowers, Mrs. H. \\'. Ballard; furniture, Charles H. Wiley; gen- eral stores, R. D. Templeton, L. A. Jewett & Son, A. B. Mulroy; groceries, Benning Brothers, John B. McKee, James Embry ; harness, Garrett & Con- rad; hardware. Boiling & Thompson, I. W. ]\lartin; hotel. Diltz & Adams; ice dealer, F. M. Favors; ice cream parlor, Mrs. PI. H. Gladish; insurance. Mrs. John Harwood, George W. Boiling; interurban agent, Joseph Miller; implements, \\'. W. Townhend; jeweler, C. F. Kappes; livery, Ottis Thompson; lumber and building supplies, John Simpson & Son; meat mar- ket, Carl G. Wolfe; millinery, Mrs. B. F. Mason; moving pictures, Howard & Pleak; newspaper, St. Paul Telegram, O. C. Pearce, editor; notions, B. F. Mason ; painter and paper hanger, Amos Dodds, Orla Wadkins, Pearce & McAuliffe ; plumloer. Garrett & Conrad ; physicians, G. J. ^lartz, F. M. Howard, Earl Jewett, D. J. Ballard, W'illiam R. Turner; pool rooms, Charles Neal, Wallace McCain, Bush Brothers; rural mail carriers, Clarence Ket- chum, Orla Guess, Denzel Doggett ; restaurant, Joseph Miller ; stock buyer, Carl G. Wolfe; saloons, George Hess, Jasper Lin\ille (both on the Shelby county side); Standard Oil Company agent, Charles Ross; tinner. George Scheiderman; undertaking, Charles H. Wiley; veterinarian, W'. R. Chrisler. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. m DISASTROUS FIRES IN ST. PAUL. There was probably more excitement in St. Paul during the summer of 1912 than any time since the Civil War. Beginning on December 22. 191 1, there were a series of se\-en fires, in number, which wrought up the inhabitants of the little town to a high pitch of excitement, and if the guilty parties, sus- pected of being the cause, of the fires, had l)een caught after the seventh fire, they might have expected severe treatment at the hands of the indignant citizens. The first fire took the elevator : the second, John West's residence ; tlie third, the Big Four depot: the fourth, Feljruary 5, 191 J, the drug and general store of Daniel Hazelrigg, as well as the postoffice, which was in his building. Hazelrigg's loss was about three thousand dollars, most of which was covered by insurance. The most destructive fire was the fifth one. On March 12, 191J, the stores of A. F. Hier & Son and John R. Turner were burned to the ground and by this time the citizens began to investigate mat- ters. Many indications pointed to incendiaries and detectives were engaged to ferret out the cause of the many fires which had come so close together. But there was still more excitement yet to come. On May 3, 1912, the store and residence of William Kelso burned with all of their contents. The bark- ing of a dog in the middle of the night wakened the Kelso family and enabled them to save their hves. By this time the inhabitants of St. Paul were on the border of a panic and there was a mass meeting to decide upon somje definite plan of action to find out the cause of all these many fires. How- e\'er, the fears of the people gradually subsided and nothing was done. Just aI;out the time that they had come to the conclusion that the fire-bug had decided to burn no more buildings in the town, the new residence of I^r. J. \\'. Bell burned to the ground on the night of July 10, 1912, and the se\'enth fire had occurred. According to the newspaper accounts, the same dog which had warned the Kelso fannlv two months previously again appeared on the scene and, by his barking, awakened the Bell family. This was the first fire in which lives were nearly lost, Mrs. Bell being severely burned before she escaped from the house. .As might be expected, the people of St. Paul were aghast at this final calamity, and dcternnned to leave no stone unturned in an effort to solve the cause of the seven fires which had taken place within a period of seven months. But it was to no avail ; the mystery ne\'er has been solved, although some people had strong suspicion as to the guilty parties. Fortunately, this fire of July to has been the last one inflicted on the sufi^ering town. IT2 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. BIG JOHN OF ST. FAUL. In the Slimmer of 1911, there arrived a big dog in St. Paul via the box car route. A brakeman, on opening a car, was astonished to see a dog of unusual size leap out and run down the railroad track. This particular dog was destined to become the hero of the fire-stricken town in the summer of 19 1 2. He was a friendly sort of a canine and was soon a favorite of every one in the town, and the whole town shared in providing him with dainty bones and all those delicacies dear to the palate of a dog. When the assessor came around in the spring of .1912 and began to inquire concerning the ownership of the dog, he was told that the dog l)elonged to the town. Such an ownership was a puzzler for the assessor and he was in a quandry how to collect the two dollars fr.mi the town. But he was soon to find out to what degree the dog had endeared himself to the citizens of the town. Tlie business men took up a collection for "Big John," and thus satisfied the craving of the law and thereby ga\e the dog another year of legal existence. This is only half of the interesting story of this dog. The grateful citizens wanted to show their appreciation of his valuable barking and finally decided to present his dogship with a gold collar. The collar bore the engrav- ing, "Big John. Hero. May 3, 1912, St. Paul, Ind." This inscription will enlighten the workl where he mingles that this canine is a real hero, and that in St. Paul, Indiana, a dog has a]jpreciati\e friends. CLAY TOWNSHIP. Clay townshi]) was organizeil in March, 1836, and was laid off liv the board of commissioners of Decatur county at their March term fur that year. It is bounded as follows, to-wit : Beginning at the county line on the section line dividing sections 22 and 2"]'. town 8, range 11 ; thence east four miles to the northeast corner of section 30, town 1 1 , range 9 ; thence south eight miles to the township line di\iding townships 9 and 10: thence west to the county line; thence with the county line to the place of beginning. This township bears the distinction of being the only one in the county which contains an entire congressional township. It is composed of the whole of township 10, range 8, and six sections of town 10, range 9, six sec- tions of town II, range 8, and two sections of town 11, range 9. After this township was organized, and evidently on the same day, the board made the following entry on the record: "Ordered that sections 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 and 9, DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. II3 in range 8', township 9, be attacined to the township of Clay." This gives the township its present limits. The history of the settlement of Clay township may be divided into fuur parts, namely: The Buck-run settlement: the Clifty settlement; the Middle Fork settlement and the Duck Creek settlement. BUCK-RUN. The first to settle here was Milton Williamson, who. in 1S22, with his family, located in the northeast part of the township. William Hartford and Bartemus Johnston, soon afterward (the same year), moved in and settled on this section. These three assisted each other in raising houses, clearing lands, and soon succeeded in establishing pleasant and comfortable houses — for that time. In 1823 Caleb Stark settled on the (piarter south of. and adjoining, the other three, the farm known as the fjuck-Run spring, on the Vandalia road. He held the office 'of county commissioner at the time of contracting for and during the erection of the present court house. He lived to see the fruits of his labors in the de\-elopment of many of the other interests of the county. The same year, Daniel Stoggsdell (or, "Elder" Stoggsdell) settled on Buck- Run, just above Mr. Stark, in which region, and afterwards throughout that and adjoining counties, he preached the Gospel in "God's first temples," the groves. He was many }'ears ago gathered to his fathers, but "his works do follow him." In 1823 David Johnson settled on the "(juarter" north of Mr. Stark, where he lived until the year 1834, when he moved to Missouri. In the same year, George W. and Jeremiah V. King, emigrants from Maryland, settled in the same section. In 1833 George W. removed to a farm adjoining the small village of Needmore Tsince changed to Milford — the name being deri\'ed from the fact of a mill being erected at the ford, near that place), where he died some years thereafter. CLIFTY SETTLEMENT. In 1823, Doddridge Alley, an industrious and energetic farmer, removed from the Saltcreek settlement, in Franklin county, and located on Clifty. about one mile north of the place where Milford now stands. He was elected the first sheriff of the county, ser\ing four years, and afterwards served two years in the state Legislature. Many amusing anecdotes are told of him (8) 114 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. (some of which have some foundation of trutli), and one of whicli is here related : On being elected to the Legislature, he started on his journey to the capital, on horseback, and arrived there in due season : but, on being cjues- ti(_)ned by the clerk, it was found that he had forgotten his credentials. So he returned on his long, weary ride to obtain them. After a long night's ride he again made his appearance at the capital, and, on examination, his papers proved to be correct, when he was told that he was entitled to his seat. He replied: "No! no! I thank you; I have been riding hard all night, and I would rather stand." The clerk, accordingly, gave him the privilege. He lived on the farm he first settled on until the year 1861, when he died and was buried in a stone wall enclosure, with a beautiful monument upon it, which he had erected during his life. John Brinson was the founder of the town of Mil ford. In 1824 he removed to that place, and established a drinking saloon ; he lived there about five years, and then left for parts unknown. In the same year William Crawford moved to this place, made a plat of the town and lived there until 1837, when he moved to Missouri. Elijah Martin settled three-fourths of a mile north of the town, in the same year, and in a short time moved away. In 1S23, W'illiam Richie settled near ]\Iilford, where he lived until the year 1834, when he died. Mr. Richie was an old Revolutionary soldier, and was the first man buried in the graveyard in IMilford. By his side sleep two of his comrades, William Crawford, and George W. King, Sr., wdio died in the ninet}-third year of his age. MIDDLE FORK SETTLEMENT. In 1824, John Fugit, afterwards associate judge of Decatur county, settled in the central part of the township, on Middle Fork creek. He held the office of judge for a number of years, and died in the year 1846. James O'Laugh- lin settled, in the same year, in the same part of the county. He lived there a considerable length of time, from whence he moved to Milford. Richard Johnson settled at the same time and place, and died a resident of the same place. Walter and Jackson Braden settled in the year 1824, about two and one-half miles southeast of ]\Iilford. where they iinpro\-etl a considerable portion of the land. Jackson died at this place, in the year 1850. Walter Braden, a few years ago, removed to Greensburg, where he resided until his death. Thomas H. Miers settled one mile east of Milford, on the land DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. H" adjoining Walter Braden on the north, in the year 1824, and died at the same place in 1847. Samuel B. Todd, in the same year, settled about one and a half miles south of Mil ford on the land which has long been known as the Hittle farm. He lived there until 1837, when he removed to Illinois. Abel Todd, a brother of the above, settled two and one-half miles southeast, on the land -where James Byers later lived. He li\-ed there a short time, and removed to Iowa, where he died. David Douglass, a minister of the New- Light persuasion, settled in the year 1824, on the land later owned by Nelson Mowrey. He preached in the settlements adjoining him, lived to a good old age. and died on his farm. Patrick Ewing came from Kentucky in the year 1826, settling on the land adjoining Mr. Douglass. He built a rude log hut, and in the yard there grew a small sprout about the size of a riding whip. He spared it, and it grew to a great tree of four feet in diameter. Under its boughs he reared a family of fifteen children. DUCK CREEK SETTLEMENT. McClure Elliott, in the year 1824, settled on Duck creek, three miles west of IMilford. William J. Lowrie, in the same year, settled two miles southwest of ]\Iilford, where he lived until 1852, when he died, and was buried by a large concourse of Sons of Temperance. SCHOOL HOUSES. The first school house was built on Dodridge Alley's land, in 1825. It was built of logs, with a fire-place occupying one end. Logs were sawed out at each side, greased paper being put in their place. This composed the model house of that time. Middle Fork school house was built in 1826. Buck Run and Duck Creek school houses were built in 1827. These school houses were used for preaching and for various other purposes. Harvey Harbinger was the first teacher in the Buck Run settlement and afterwards taught in the other districts. In 1836 the township was divided into districts. At this time the houses in the town.s'hips were built of logs. In 1837 a frame school house was ereced in Milford. This was the first structure here for school purposes which was built of fraiue. In a few years afterward frames were erected, which have now become useless, and brick school houses have been erected over the township. Il6 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. CHURCHES. Tlie Baptist, Methodist, New Light and Presbyterian denominations held meetings in the varions school houses, from 1825 until iS'32, when the Hardshell Baptists erected a church. In 1842 the ^lethodists erected a church in jMilford. The Christians, in the year 1843, huilt a church in Milford. Salem church, near Milford. was huilt in 1S33. by the Associate Baptists. The historv of the churches is found in another chapter. MANUF.VCTORIES. The first mill was established by Jesse Fugit, a son of Judge Fugit, in 1825. and was run by horse-power. The first water-mill was built by Eli Critser, in 1826. near .\dams, where the relics of the old Doddridge Alley' mill now stands. In 1838, James Rose erected a woolen factory one-half mile west of Milford, which was run by horse-power. Edward W'arthin established a distiller\- ricar the same place in 1836, the only one e\er erected' in the township : it continued for about five years. A tan yard was estab- lished in 1830 by a man named Wilkinson, on the land of Doddridge Alley.' The present officers of Clay township are as follows : Trustee, Francis' M. Pumphrey; assessor. William Wils(jn ; ad\'is()ry board, J. W. Corya, Frank Tompson ; road supervisors, John Kanouse, James Cory, Ewing Arnold and Morgan J. Ewing. Clay is now the wealthiest township in the count}-, with the exception of Wasliington. The Columbus. Hope & Cireensburg railroad runs east and' west through this township and gives the inhabitants of this locality a ready outlet for their produce to the leading markets. It also has one railroad station on the A'ernon, Greensburg & Rushville railroad, which cuts ofi a' small corner of the southeast part of the township. MILFORD. INIilford is the oldest town in this township. It was platted and laid out by James Edwards, August 25, 1835, and was originally known by the name of Needmore ; Ijut just why this little \illage was encumbered with such a name is left to the imagination of the reader. Later additions to the' original plat were made by ^^'i^iam Crawford, George \\'. King, Silas Craig,' James L. Fugit and James Marshall. The first merchant to open a store in ^Nlilford and offer his wares for' DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. II7 sale was John I'.rinson. Mr. Brinson also bears the distinction of l)eing the' first merchant in Clay township and was well patronized by the early settlers who had taken up claims in this part of the county. The first millers to locate in this part of the county were the Critsers, who owned several mills along Clifty creek and for a time had a monopoly on the milling industry in this section. Their monopoly was contested for a time by William Burton, who owned and ran a horse-mill near Mil ford, to which he attached con- siderable importance. Mr. Burton put up a strong opposition for a time, but soon aljdicated to the Critsers and left them in full sway. The first tannery was built and operated by James Wilkinson and McClure Elliott and fur- nished all the leather goods for the early consumption of the county. John Henderson was the first blacksmith to settle here and ply his trade, and was familiarly known to the early settlers of the time, far and near, as' "Jackie." Wr. Henderson ironed the first wagon in this county for Fielding Peak. The first steam engine in this township was owned and operated by Edwin Warthin, in 1836 or 1837. It was used to drive the machinery of a mill on Clifty creek, a short distance below Milford. This mill also bears the distinction of being the first steam grist-mill, with a bolting apparatus, in' the countv. This was a great advertising asset to the owners, for it attracted' settlers from all parts of this section to see the mill in actual operation. Before this advancement, the mills had been run by water power supplied by Clifty creek. It is impossible to trace the wirious Inisiness changes in Milford froiu the beginning of the town down to the present time. The business interests of iqi5 include three stores, owned by E. E. Lewis, J. F. Goff and Harrj^ Peterson. The Lewis store is a well-stocked general mercantile establish- ment and is one of the best general stores in the county. The stores of Gofif and Peterscjn carry only a small stock of groceries and depend for their patronage on the restaurants which they run in connection. Mr. Lewis also operates a restaurant and soda fountain in connection with his store. The village has one blacksmith, Lincoln Vandiver. There is no factory of any kind in the town, although .\lbert Sanders operates a flour-iuill on Clifty creek, a half mile from town. His mill is run by water power when there is plenty of water and by a gasoline engine at such times as the water power is insufficient. The professional interests of the village are represented by Dr. George S. Crawford, who has lieen practicing in the place for a period • of forty years. The history of the lodges of Milford (the Masons and Odd Fellows) and the churches (Methodist and Christian) will be found in their respective chapters elsewhere in this \olume. The town is incorporated for Il8 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. civil purposes onl\ . The present town cleri< is Doctor Crawfurd. The town once had a population of four hundred, hut now has only abnut one hundred. nURNEY. The village of Burney. in Clay townhsip. on the Columbus, Hope & Greensburg railroad, was laid out on 'Slay 2, 1882. by James C. Pulse. It has enjoyed a steady growth from the beginning and is now a thriving town, w'ith flourishing business enterprises and many attractive and comfortable homes. A fine, modern school building and two churches, Methodist and Baptist, take care of the educational and religious life of the community. The business and professional interests in 19x5 are as follows: Bank, Burney State Bank; barber, Thomas J. Henderson; blacksmith, J. E. Wasson, G. M. Miner & Son; carpenter and contractor, Edward Clapp; coal dealer, Sidner & Price; dentist, Frank Davis; elevator, Sidner & Price; express, American Express Company ; garage. Smiley & Dean ; general store, A. E. Howe, J. C. Hayes, H. C. Lawrence ; hardware, McCullough Hardware Co. ; hotel, Mrs. M. J. Luther, Mrs. Clay Alexander : livery. Clay Alexander ; lumber, Padgett & Son ; meat market, W. S. Miner ; music teachers, Alice Arnold, Mrs. Elsie Gartin; notary public, L. T. Howell, Fannie Johnson, W'. \\. Barnes; photo- grapher, F. W. Kean ; physician, C. G. Harrod, Edward Porter; painter, Thomson & Luther; postoffice, W. S. Miner; paper hanger, Miers & Gal- braith ; restaurant, F. W. Kean, W. S. ]\'Iiner; real estate and insurance, L. T. Powell; saw-mill. Otto Detrich; shoe cobbler, Frank Hiner; station agent, J. S. Miner; stock buyer, Pumphrey & Son, Davis & Davis, W. W. Lane. Burney is justly proud of its band, which was organized in the spring of 191 5. Although at this time it has been practicing !)ut a few months, it has already given concerts wdiich were well recei\ed. It is under the direc- tion of George Dunn, of Adams. The members of the band are as follows: Cornets, Herbert Lawson, Lora Hayes, Walter Bailey, Ralph Howe, Roscoe Arnold, Walter Galitine, Robert Champ and Russell Emlay ; baritone, John Christian ; alto, Jasper Spaugh and James Galbraith ; tenors, Harry Jackson and H. C. Miner; clarinets, Ernest Miner and L. D. Lambert; trombones, Fred Luther, T. J. liendrickson, Edwin (iibson and Roy Emlay; melophone, Clarence Thomson; tuba, Burney Jackson; bass, Clififord Thurston; snare drum, Flenry Emlay; bass drum, Charles Gartin. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. HQ WYNCOOP. Wyncoop is the next town in size in this township. It was platted on February 2T,, 1881, b}- James \\'yncoop and bears the founder's name, althougii the name of the postoftice has been changed to Horace. This town is situated on the North A'ernon, Greensburg & Rushville raihoad, in the extreme sontiieastern j^art of the township. The business interests of the town in 19 15 are contined to a general store, owned by E. A. Gibson, and a blacgsmith shop, operated by Clyde Purvis. The station agent, Orlando Robbins, also buys grain. The post- master is Mr. Gibson. The tnwn has less than a dozen houses and a popula- tion of about thirt}^. Ewington completes the list of towns in Clay township. This was formerly a postoffice for the convenience of the country people, but the rural free delivery has taken away its usefulness and at present onlv the name remains. FUGIT TOWNSHIP. Fugit township was one of the three original townships laid off by the board of commissioners on May 14, 1822. The other two townships were Adams and Washington, the latter of which embraced considerably more than the southern half of the county. b\igit township, as originally set oft', con- tained all the territory now within its limits with the exception of sections 32, 5, 8 and 17, and half sections 33, 4, 9 and 16. These four full and four half sections are now in the eastern part of Clinton township. They being a part of Clinton when it was organized July 6, 1829. The original limits of the township as defined by the commissioners on May 14, 1822, are as follow: Beginning at the county line on the line divid- ing townships 10 and 11 ; thence west with township line to the southwest corner of section t,^. range 10, townshi]i 11 ; thence n(irtli with the line di\'id- ing sections 34 and 35 to the southwest corner of section 26 in the township and range aforesaid: thence west with the section line to the southwest cor- ner of section 28, in range 10, township 11 ; thence north with the said sec- tion line to the southwest corner of section 16, range 10, township 11 ; thence west with the section line to the southwest corner of section 17, range 10, township 1 1 : thence north with the said line to the county line ; thence east with the county line to the northeast corner of said county ; thence south I20 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. with the county hue to the place of beginning (Commissioners Record, Vol. I, page I ). The next change in the territorial limits of Fugit township was made on March 7, 1825, at which time the board of justices issued the following- ambiguous order; "That part id' Washington township which lies east and north of a road viewed from Henderson's to the count}- line near Alexander McCall's, including said road, to be attached to and made a part of Fugit township" (Board of Justice Records, \'ol. I, page 128). Just where this strip was located is impossible to determine from the records, since it is not defined by section, town or range. However this slip on the part of the board of justices was rectified on May 2, 1825, when the commissioners re-defined the townshi]) limits in the following definite manner : Begin- ning at the county line, on the range line dividing ranges 9 and 10: thence south on said line to the southwest corner of section 19, township 11, range 10; thence east tw-o miles; thence south one mile; thence east two miles; thence south one mile to the township line dixiding tow-nships 10 and 11, thence east with said line to the county line; thence with the lines of the county to the place of beginning (Board of Justice Records, Vol. I, page 128). Subsequently, on May 3, 1830, the board of justices ordered that the west half of section 21, township 11, range 10, which lies in Clinton town- ship be and the same is new-ly attached to the township of Fugit in the said county of Decatur (^^ol. H, page 87). This gives Fugit tow-nship its present limits. SETTLEMENT. Se\-eral families had settled within what is now Fugit township before the county of Decatur was r^rganized in 1822. The count\- was carved out of the "New Purchase," which had been bought from the Indians in the fall of 1818, although the lands were not offered for sale at the Brookville land office until the fall of 1820. During the winter and spring of 1818, seven families came o\-er from near Matamora, bVanklin count)', and "squatted" in what is now Fugit township. This w-as probably the first effort toward a permanent settlement in the new- territory. Just about the same time, there were three other settlements in the southeastern part of the "New Purchase" — one on Flatrock, in Rush count}-; a second on Haw- creek, in Bartholomew, county; the third on Big Flatrock, in Shelby county. Of course, these first seven families could enter no land here, as it had not yet been surveyed ; who they were, where they finally located, and whether they became perman- ent settlers in the countv later on has not been determined. Xearlv one bun- a w K > -1 iS 3 -^K t-i cc3 i -1 B - g Cd f S-2 i. ^ ^ S > 5' K DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 121 dred years have elapsed since that day and no records are available to trace the nn-sterious se\"en families. It is taken by common consent that the Fiigit family were the first real settlers in what is now the township bearing their name. John Fugit, and his two children, John and Mary, came to the township in the latter part of February, 1S19. They selected a site for their caljin and. while engaged in putting it up, were joined by Griffy Griffith, his wife and son, Ishmael. The Griffiths located one mile west of Clarksburg, where they lived until the death of the father and mother. .Vfter l'\igit and his son had their rude cabin ready for occupancv. the whole family, consisting of the father, mother, four sons and two daughters, made this township their permanent home for a number of vears. The Fugits entered no land and citizens of the towaiship have never agreed as to the exact spot where the old Fugit cabin stood. Some have maintained that they settled northeast nf Clarksliurg, while others hold that they located one mile east of Clarksburg on land later entered by Benjamin Snelling. Still others belie\'e that the Fugits squatted on the old Luther Donnell place. Strange to say, neither James L. Fugit, one of the sons of the old pioneer, nor Mary, a daughter (who became the wife of David Garrison), could identify the exact spot wdiere their father had settled. They had removed to Clay township in 1825 and when they revisited their first home in the county, several years later, the surroundings were so changed that they were unable to agree as to where the family cabin had stood. It is probable that it was on the Donnell farm, which had been entered by Thomas Donnell, Sr., in 1822. They doubtless purchased the improvements tm the place from Fugit. At the first election in 1822, John Fugit was chosen associate judge. His daughter, Sarah, married Joseph Webb, and this was the first marriage in the county. The license was secured at Brookville in the fall of 1819 and the marriage took place presumably in the log cabin in Fugit township. John Fugit died at Milford (Cliffy) in 1844. At the present time the Fugit line is not represented b}' any male Ijearing the name in the county. Shortly after the I'ugits and Griffiths had located here, in the spring of i8ig, the}- were joined by five other families: John and Elisha Jerrett (Gerrard). Jesse and Cornelius Cain and \Mlliani ]\IcCoy. John Jerrett dietl in the siiring of 1820, and was, as far as is known, the first one to die in the county. A daughter of Jerrett, Xellie by name, was born in the fall of 1 8 19 and was the first white child to be born in the county. The Cains settled near Spring Hill, but a few years later moved into Rush county, where 122 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Jesse lived until his death. George Cain emigrated to the west antl within a few }'ears the family name disappears from the records of both Decatur and Rush counties. McCoy first located near Griffith and then moved over into what is now Adams township nortli of Downeyville. The McCoy family have been prominently identified with the history of the county from its beginning down to the present time. Ishmael Griffith married a daughter of William Walters, near Kingston, and at his death left two sons, John and James. John was accidentally killed near Downeyville and James served in the Civil War as a member of Company F. Seventh Indiana Volunteer Infantrw This disposes of all the important incidents connected with the immigrants of 1819. During the spring and summer of 1820 the land in this county was surveyed by Col. Thomas Hendricks and in October of that year it was placed on sale at Brook\ille. However, before the land was formally opened for settlement the settlers began to pour in at a rapid rate. In the summer and fall of 1820. the following families located in what is now Fugit township: Seth Lowe, William Custer, George and Samuel Donnell. James Saunders, Nathan Lewis, James and Moses Wiley, Robert Hall, Rev. James Hall, David Stout. Joseph Rankin, John Bryson, Adam Rankin, \\'illiam, Joseph and James Henderson and Joseph A. Hopkins. LAND ENTRIES. The first land entry was made on October 9, 1820, by James Wiley, who entered one hundred and sixty acres in section i, township 10, range 11. John Shelhorn and John M. Robinson entered tracts shortly afterwards. From the 9th of October. 1820, to December 31, there were forty-eight entries in what is now Fugit township, while there were only forty-five entries made in all the rest of the county. These forty-eight pioneers were as follows : James Wiley, John Shel- horn, John M. Robinson, George Kline, John Bryson, James Saunders, Joseph K. Rankin. Thomas Martin, Griffy Griffith, David Martin, Cornelius Cain, Joseph Henderson, Fdward Jackman, William Henderson, William Lindsey, George Marlow, Adam Rankin, Joseph A. Hopkins, Thomas Throp, .Samuel A: Githens, Robert Imlay, Daniel Swem, John Hicklin, Aquilla Cross, W'illiam Custer, John Shutz, Martin and Alexander Logan, James Logan. William Pruden, John Daw.son, Elias Garrard, Charles Collett, John Linville, James Hobbs, Jr., Robert E. and Henry Hall, Thomas Hall, Moses Wiley, George Donnell, John Smart, Robert and John Lockridge, Richard DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 1 23 Tyner, George Cowan, James Henderson and Nathan Lewis. The striking- fact of these entries is that practically ever_\one entering the land was a bona fide settler on the land he entered. Only two or three never liecame residents of the townships. During 1821 there were tifty-nine additional entries in the township — thus making a total of one hundred and seven entries before the countv was organized in the spring of 1822. As a matter of fact, there were a number of entries in the township between January i, and May 14, 1822, the date on which the township was formally organized. It seems there were only thirteen entries during the whole of 1822. The fifty-nine entries of 182 1 were as follow: James Oliver, David Robertson, Samuel Alarlow, Henry Glen, Jacob Blacklege, John Wilcoxon, Jesse Woinack, Robert Wilson, Adam R. Meek, George Marlow, William Braden, Jacob Underwood. Columbus McCoy, Hugh McCracken, Nathaniel Smith, Henry McDaniel, John Lockridge, Jacob F. ^Miller, Isaac Donnell, John Hopkins, Zenas Powell, David Caldwell, Lewis Hendricks, Charles Swerengin, George Kendall, John Chanslor, Samuel Donnell. Thomas I. Glass, Jonathan J. Stites, William M. Smith, John Thompson, Thomas Cross, William M. Smith, Seth Lowe, Thomas Hamilton, Cyrus Hamilton, James Moss, Peter Miller, George Kendall, William Lippard, Jesse Cain, Jesse Robinson, George Conner. William Penny, Henry Roberts, William Snelling, Edgar Poe, Sampson Alley, Edward Davis, William Marlow, Benjamin Snelling, George Craig, James Sefton, Daniel Bell, Daniel Ryce, Frank Kitchin, Nathan L'nderwood, Ralph ^^'il!iams, James Caldwell, Samuel Donner and David Robertson. It will be noticed that some of these men entered more than one tract in that year ; some had entered land in the previous year also. The entries of 1822 were as follow; David Vancleave, James McCracken, R. B. Donnell, Andrew Calloway, John D. Henry, John P. Mitchell, John Smart, Joseph Snelling, William Kennedy, Sarah Linville, Mary Munns and William Munns. The year 1822 practically closed the sale of govern- ment land in Fugit township. Not all of the land was yet taken, but that which was left was a narrow strip on the eastern side of the township, known as the "Poor Woods," and was not entered until after the thirties. Most of it was taken up bv German immigrants, who have succeeded in making it as producti\'e as most of tlie rest of the tov/nshi]!. The first German settlers in the township were George Schellings, Antwa Charles and John Arnold. They were stone masons and found plenty of work in their profession. Else- where in this volume is a special chapter on the Gerinan element in Decatur 124 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. county, togetlier witli a list of the Germans who became naturahzed citizens of the county. It might be well at this point to make mention of the colored settlement in Fugit township. Early in the forties a few colored families located a few miles east of Clarksburg and by 1852 they numbered about seventy-five souls. Some of them owned small farms, but the most of theiu depended for a liveli- hood on working on the farms of the white citizens. They took an active part in hel]:)ing fugitives slaves to make their way across the county and over into Union county. Their participation in the "underground railroad"' enterprise is mentioned elsewhere in this volume. When the fugitive slave law of 1852 was passed many of them left the county, some going to other parts of the state and many of them finally reaching Canada. There is now only one left in the township. Margaret Wilson, of Kingston. ORGANIZ.VTION OF THE TOWNSHIPS. As has been stated, Decatur countv began its independent career on ]\Iay 14, 1822, on which day the commissi(.)ners held their first meeting. On this day the whole county was divided into three townships, \\'ashington, Adams and Fugit. The county commissioners a])pointed officers for each town- ship, those for Fugit being as follows: Isaac Darnall, inspector of elections; Henry Hobbs, constable; Thomas Throp, superintendent of the reserve sec- tion (school section) in township 11, range 10; \\illiam Custer and Joseph Henderson. o\-erseers of the poor; William Leopard, Ruljert Emily and George INIarlow, fence viewers. On this same day (May 14, 1822) the com- missioners ordered elections to be held at the house of Thomas Throp, the first election to be on June i, following, for a justice of the peace. EARLY INDUSTRIES. The first store in the tciwuship, and perhaps in the county, was started at Spring Hill loy James Conwell, of Laurel (Franklin county), in 1823. Conwell was a thrifty trader and established the store here as a branch of his large store in Laurel. Fie placed Martin Benson in charge of the store at Spring Flill. The first post(ithce was at this place and John Bryson became the first postmaster. Bryson was later an associate judge. Nathan Lew-is had a corn-cracker, ojierated by horse-power, early in the twenties. Later Lewis converted his mill into a liark grindery and pulverized slippery elm, dogwood and sassafras barks for the Eastern markets. Edward Jackman DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 12^ was the first to install a carding machine and found plenty of business to keep him busy. William Henderson was interested in a number of enterprises; he operated a grist-mill, a carding factory and a distillery and found a ready sale for the products of all three establishments. He was located a short di.s- tance east of Spring Hill. .\ grist-mill was operated at an early date aljout a mile south of Kingston by a man named Smith. Lewis Lacker opened up a tan yard on the farm later owned by Everett Hamilton and furnished the community with leather for se\eral years. Joseph Henderson opened the first ta\-ern in the townshi]5 a short distance east of Spring Hill. EARLY SCHOOLS. The early settlers of Fugit township were very much interested in edu- cation and shortly after they located here they began to make provisions for educating their children. In igoi Camilla Donnell, a descendant of one of the most prominent families of the township, prepared a paper on the "Early Schools of Fugit Township," and the historian is indebted to her excellent article for the main facts concerning the schools of the township. Just where the first school house was located is not definitely known, although it is certain that schools were kept in log cabins for some years before a school building was erected. There appear to have been three or four schools in operation in 1823-24 in as many different neighborhoods. They were situated in the midst of thick woods and jjlazed trails led the way to the school house door. The first school in the Kingston neighborhood was held in an empty log cabin on the line between the farms then owned by Seth Lowe and Acjuilla Cross. Whether Samuel Donnell, a man well known in early religious, edu- cational and ref(3rm movements, or Samuel Henr}', an intelligent farmer and excellent scholar, was the first teacher has not been established. Both taught at one time or another in the township. Elijah Mitchell, who taught at various places over Decatur county, was another of the early wielders of the rod. Still other teachers were the Misses Howe, two Eastern women, who conducted a school at the home of the first Presbyterian minister, Mr. Lowry. All the schools were subscription schools uji to 1832 and the teacher was usually compelled to take his pay out in farm produce. In about i8'32 the township was organized into scIkkiI sections and received a small anmunt of money from the sale of school lands. A few school houses were built in the township about this time and three months sessions were held. Most of the buildings were also used for subscription schools for a few months in addi- tion to the three months of public school. In 1833 the first brick school 126 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. house in tlie town^-hip, and probaljl}- in the c(junty, was erected on the farm of Cyrus Hamilton, in the field southwest of his house. Rev. James McCoy, Elijah Mitchell. Davis Henry and many other excellent old pioneers taught in this building. A second district school building was built a little later on the old Throp farm, near the homestead of .^.ndrew Robison. It was known as the Robison school house until its subsequent removal to Carmel. A third school house of the early days stood on the farm of Martin Benson, later owned by Warder Hamilton. The salaries of these faithful teachers were very meager. The mother of Camilla Donnell (then Mrs. Minerva Bartholomew), who taught at the brick school house and also at the Benson school, received only eight dollars a month. But it must be remembered that able-bodied men were glad to work for twenty-five cents a day in the early history of the county. About 1845 ^ school was established by Re\'. King, a Presbyterian minister, in the town which still bears his name (Kingston). A private school was also taught by Rev. Cable, another Presbyterian minister, near Kingston. These two excellent schools so weakened the Brick, Benson and R(il)ison schools that they were finally abandoned. The houses were sold or mo\-ed away and the district school was permanently established in the village of Kingston about 1852 or 1853. Rev. Benjamin Nyce, an educator of great originality and ability, became its head, and it entered on a career of unparalelled usefulness and prosperity. In 1853 William Dobyns, for Clarksburg, Thomas Hamilton, for Kingston, and James Bonner, for Spring Hill, were appointed a board of township trustees, one retiring each year. Their duties were to arrange the township into school districts, provide suitable buildings and engage teachers. Other members of the school board at different times were Henry Kerrick, S. A. Donnell, J. H. Cartmell and George Ivennedy. This board of three members continued at the head of the township schools until 1859, when Luther. Donnell was elected trustee under the new law. He had complete charge of the schools of the township and since that time the affairs of the schools have Ijeen concentrated in the hands of one man. While the board of three had charge of affairs, the Kingston school was established in the Presbyterian church, which had been bought for that purpose. The new Constitution of 1852 ]irovided for a system of free public schools and funds were set aside for one building for each school district. The public-spirited citizens of the three larger districts — Clarksburg, Kings- ton and Spring Hill — raised enough money by private subscription to erect DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 127 two-Story buildings in their respective towns, the law providing on!)- suffi- cient money for one-story buildings. The first Spring Hill school was housed in one of the traditional empty log cabins. It stood on the big hill, just east of the present road, on the farm of James Martin. It was begun not earlier than 1824, since its first teacher. Thomas INIeek, the assessor of a large part of the Spring Hill community, did not emigrate from Kentucky until 1823. Its second teacher was William Marlow. Another early school was held in the old Bryson homestead, but the Martin school seems to have been the forerunner of the Spring Hill district school. Probably as early as 1835 a district school house was built on the farm of Adam Rankin, not far from the present school site. It was afterward rebuilt and enlarged and remained in use until the erection of the two-story brick building early in the Civil War. It was burned down in 1894 and replaced by the present one-story building. Among the teachers of Spring Hill may be mentioned some men who later made a reputation in the world — such men as Stanley Coulter, now of Purdue University; Rev. Thomson, of Tarkeo, Missouri; R. M. ^Miller and Marshall Hacker were principals of the Spring Hill school at various times. The Carmel neighborhood was the home of John Bell, one of the earliest and best-known teachers in the township. Its early school history has been lost in oblivion, but it is probable that early schools were held in the cabin near the home of Andrew McCoy and in a deserted shop on the McCracken farm. The first district school in the Carmel neighborhood was built on the farm of Jacob Miller sometime in the thirties. It was probably in use until the fifties when it was succeeded by a second building. The third building is now in use, a neat and comfortable structure which meets all of the modern requirements. The Clarksburg community had some of the earliest settlers and undoubtedly some of the earliest private schools. Unfortunately, it seems impossible to get exact data concerning them. The best known of these schools was held in a cabin on the farm of Luther Donnell. Another early private school was held in the home of Nathan Lewis. It is probable that the first district school was located on South Main street, in a building which had been used as a residence. Mrs. Minerva Bartholomew taught in 1837 in an empty shop in the eastern part of the town. The forerunner of the present village school was located opposite the residence of J. N. Moore. Among the early teachers of Clarksburg may be mentioned Elijah Mitchell. John Bell, Joseph Rankin, George McCoy' and Nimrod Kerrick. Of these 128 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. early teachers Nimrod seems to have been the most successful and best beloved. A two-story brick building was erected in 1856 in Clarksburg on the present school site and remained in use until about 1880 when a four- room luiilding was erected. In igio a modern, eight-room lirick Ijuilding was erected. Sufficient has been said of the early schools of Fugit township to show that its public-spirited citizens were keenly alive to the value of good schools. The fact that so many men and women ha\e gone out from the schools of the township well equipped to take their place in the world is ample evi- dence that the schools have been doing their work well. Clarksburg now has a consolidated school and gives a four-year commissioned high-school course. The schools will rank well with any m the state and the citizens of the com- munity may take a just pride in the work they are doing. There are seven teachers in the town and five teachers in the rural schools of the township in 1915- CHURCHES. The history of the many churches of the township may be found in the special church chapter. Fugit township has been a peculiarly religious community. ]\Iost of the early settlers were Presbyterian in faith, although the Methodists and Christians have been strong enough to establish churches. The Germans who settled in the county were nearly all Catholics and they support a strong congregation at St. Maurice. i\t one time or another there ha\e been three Presbyterian, two ^Methodist, one Christian and one Catholic church in Fugit township. The ofticers of Fugit township are as follow: Trustee, Albert T. Brock; assessor, David D. Morgan ; advisory board, Clinton B. Emmert, \\"alter Scott and Carl E. Brown; supervisors of roads, b\ank Winger, John Han- diges and Jacob IMauer. KINGSTON. Situated in the southeastern corner of Fugit township is the pretty little village of Kingston, which was laid out in 1851 by Seth Lowe and others. It was one of the first settled points in the county and there was a straggling village there many years befure it was formally platted and an attempt was made to make it a town of any importance. The town has grown up around the Presbvterian church, formerly known( as the Sand Creek congregation, but now called the Kingston church. The complete history of this interesting church is given in the church chapter elsewhere in DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 129 this \'oIume. A general store, run b\- \V. K. Stewart, and a blacksmith shop, operated by Harry Walker, are all the industries of the town at the present time. The town has a population of about fifty souls. ST. MAURICE. As its name indicates, the town of St. Maurice is of Catholic origin. It was laid out by D. Montague, August 12, 1859, primarily because of the Catholic church which was located here. It is in the south central part of Fugit township and is the center of the Catholic population of this part of the county. The present enterprises include the following : General store. Frank Kramer: tailor, IMartin !kIoser: saw-mill, Benjamin r^Ioorman; black- smith, Albert W'alke. There are less than fifty people in the town. • SPRING HILL. A postoffice was maintained at Spring I-Iil! in the Udrthwest corner of Fugit township, but it has long since been discontinued. The lirst settlers of Decatur county located near this point and the first store in the county was established here by James Conwell. When Clarksburg began to grow in importance, Spring Hill rapidly declined and today there is only one build- ing left on the site of the once thriving village — the Spring Hill Presby- terian church, the most beautiful country church in the county. In this case the best part c^f the village has sur\i\'ed the longest. CLARKSBURG. The town of Clarksburg was laid out. April 9. 1832. by Woodson Clark, who had, however, bestowed his name on the little village prior to that date. Clark erected the first house and James W'iley. who entered the first land in h'ugit township, put up the second log cabin. The town is one of the oldest in the county and had it lieen fortunate to attract a railroad it would undoubtedly have become a trading center of importance. It is surrounded by a rich fanuing community and the high character of its citizens fmm the beginning has made it a favored section of the county. Its churches and schools have always taken a prominent part in the life of the commu- nity and their influence has been such that the people of Clarksburg and Fugit township have taken the lead in many of the religious, educational and reform movements in the county. Much of the early history of the town is (9) 130 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. covered in tlic discussion of l'\igit townsliip, while the churches, schools and lodges are treated in special cliapters. Clarkshurg has always been an excellent trading center, despite the fact that it is several miles from a railroad. Daily hacks make the trip to Greensburg, and now a large automobile truck makes a round trip daily with freight and passengers. The main industries of the town in 191 5 are as follows : Apiarist, Alexander W'alker ; bank, Clarksburg State Bank, A. T. Brock, cashier: barber, Clarence Cornelius, George Rogers; blacksmith, W. W. Gross, John lirodie. ('liarles Brown; carriage ])ainter. I'",lnicr Hutton ; carpenter, James Moore, ]\Iorgan & Hall ; drugs, A. C. Shumm ; flour-mill, C. B. Emmert ; garage, C. C. Jeffrey Smith, French & Martz ; general store, Fred Lampe, Homer Russell, D. R. Higgins; hardware, H. C. Doles; hotel, Mattie [Miller; harness, James T.. Burns; li\-ery. Jasper Jackson, George Da\'is; millinery, Mrs. Emma Shumm; paper hanger, C. L. Sample; paint- ers, A. C. Burns, John Bruner, John \^onRissen, Glen Gross, M. B. Hite; photographer, C. B. Harrell ; pool room, \\'aldo McGuire; physician, C. M. Beall, Prosser E. Clark, \V. !•'. Thomas, J. L. Siuith ; restaurants, Morgan Brothers, Monte Linville ; saw-mill, C. B. Emmert ; stone and brick mason, Peter Christy; truck driver, Oscar F. Kuhn (daily auto trips to Greens- liurg ) ; veterinary, A. E. Alexander ; well digger, J. W. Christian. The town receives a sealed pouc'h daily from the Greensburg postoffice. J. L. Smith is the postmaster. The town has never Ijeen incorporated. JACKSON TOWNSHIP, Jackson township was established \)y the board of commissioners, March 3, 1834. It is bounded as follows: Beginning at the southwest corner of the county, thence north to the township line, dixiding townships 9 and 10, thence east four and a half miles to the center of section 2, on the north side thereof ; thence south to the Jennings county line ; thence west to the place of beginning. These limits have never been changed. Jackson township was among the last to be settled, as its soil was black and wet and the early settlers sought land with natural drainage, that could be cultivated early in the spring. Since farmers have learned the use of tile ditches, Jackson township has come into its own and its 1)urr oak flats are now considered the equal of any farming land in the county. Follow- ing the subdivisions of the original government survey, most of the farms DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. I3I in this township are square or oblong, and the roads run on section Hues, which make it very convenient in getting about. Among the early settlers of the township were Henry Hawk and Enoch Foster, who came from Ohio; Daniel Sullivan and Charles Guinea. who came from Jefiferson county, and Samuel Eli, from Union county. These men are supposed to have settled in Jackson township in 1828. Others who came soon after were: Samuel Thomson, William Evans, Adam Hall, Adam Petree, Abram Barrett, James Wheeldon, William H. Eddleman, John Chamljers, C'hesley Woodard, Daniel Eddleman, William and James Chambers, liliza Moncrieg and Jack Herring. A\'illiam Evans built the first saw-mill in Jackson township anil the first church in the township was built by the Baptists upon land donated for that ])urpose l)v Charles Woodard. Early school teachers of the town- ship were 1'. X. I'ishop and John McCleary. The first school building was built in 1834 on the farm entered by William Evans. Unlike the present comfortable school houses of the township, this early building was verj' ])rimiti\'e. It had a puncheon iloor, clapboard roof and door, split sai)ling for seats and the large fireplace had only a dirt backwall. The only writing desks were rough 1)oards on two sides of the building, supported by pins driven into the walls. Light was provided through" windows made of oiled newspapers. Writing of this early school, J. A. Dillman, one of its first pupils says: "McCleary was too tender hearted to whip, but one day some of us boys did something that it was necessary to punish us for in order to maintain his authority. Eight of us were sent to the woods and each of us lirought in a good-sized beech 'gad'. Then he paired us off and made us whip one another, lap-jacket fashion, only that one of us whipped at a time. I was a weakly boy of ten, and my opponent was a big boy of fourteen, with a pair of buckskin breeches and a fawn-skin vest with woolsey blouse. I whipped first and laid it on light, hoping that my friend would do the same — indeed it was no use to strike hard, for you might as well have tried to hurt a rhinoceros; but when it came his turn he brought down his "gad" like whip- ping a balky ox, while I yelled and screamed with pain. But then ends of justice were satisfied and so were McCleary and the big boy." The southern part of the township was crossed by a railroad in the eighties and thus the farmers got a much easier access to the markets. Along the railroad sprang up the flourishing towns of Sardinia and Alert. Other towns in the township are Waynesburg and Newburg (Forest Hill). The present officers of Jackson township are as follow: Trustee, Sam 132 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Kelly ; assessor, William Barton ; advisory board, Albert Moncrieff, Jacob Thurston, John H. Cooper; road supervisors, Ed. T. I'" rale}-. \\'alter Shaw, Dan Carnes and William Golay; justice of the peace, Joseph A. Burns. FOREST HILL. The town of Forest Hill was laid out on ^larch 17, 1852, by Newberry Wheeldon as Newburg. It is an inland village, in the extreme northern part of Jackson township, and is two miles from the Michigan division of the Big Four railroad. The fact that it does not have railroad connection has made it impossible to enjoy much of a growth. It is a pleasant little village, with good, well-shaded streets, and a quiet air of prosperity. A Presby- terian church and a modern two-room school building take care of the religious and educational life of the community. It was once incorporated for both ci\il and school purposes, but the \illage did not prove large enough to support itself as an independent community. The present interests are confined to the following: Blacksmith, J. K. Devening; general store, E. T. Fraley; grocery, A. W. Crigler; physician, M. C. Vest (county coroner); restaurant, Emmett Watson. The present population is about one hundred and twenty-fi\-e. WAYNESBURG. W'aynesburg was laid out in the central western part of Jackson town- ship by George Lough on Novemljer 4, 1844. It is three miles from a rail- road and for this reason has never become a town of any imi)ortance; The fifteen houses of the town shelter a happy community who find employment in the various enterprises of the town or on farms in the vicinity. The stores are those of Thomas Burch, George Himelich and Henr_\- Purvis. A saw- mill is operated by William Barton and Frank Van Scyoc. John Cornelius is the village blacksmith. ALERT. James Bannister is the patron saint of Alert, a town which he laid out on August 30, 1886. It is located in the southeastern part of Jackson township, on the Chicago, Terre Haute & Eastern railroad, and is a thriving business little place which lives up to its name. Several years ago there was a two-story sash saw-mill here which did a big business for many years before it was finally closed down in 1876. The logs were cut with a cross- cut saw instead of a circular saw, a fact which explains why it was a two- S(']:.\i:s ox MAJ;i(i.\ ki.liott st(I( k i-auji. jackso.x Tdwxsiiir. I.KSXEII KLLIOTT, JACKSON TOWNSHIP COKX I'UIZIO WIXNKU. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. I33 stor}' building. A bank bas been recently establisbed in the town and a can- ning factory was ixiilt in the summer of 191 5, which was ready to handle the crop of that year. The business and professional interests of Alert in 191 5 included the following: Bank, Alert State Bank; barber, Albert Jordan; blacksmiths, A. B. Blazer, Earl Wright ; canning factory, Frank Doty, Jr. ; dentist, C. L. Hill; elevator, Blish Milling Co., of Seymour, Edward Talkington, man- ager; garage, John Saters; general store, S. B. Leach, W. E. Wolfer; har- ness, J. H. Burns; house mover, Jacob Wolfinger; postmaster, Thomas J. Morton : veterinary. Raymond Bannister ; woodworker, Ora Clayton. In 1914 the railroad company built stock sheds at Alert and a large amount of stock is now shipped from the town. Large quantities of hay and grain are bought annually by the Blish Milling Company,' of Seymour, through its local agent, Edward Talkington, and his assistant, Earl Arnold. The Alert Telephone Company has sixty-two patrons on its own line, which is operated through an exchange in charge of J. C. Nicholson. It has free service with all exchanges in Decatur and Bartholomew counties and pay connection with the Bell and Independent long distance lines. Samuel Kelly, who lives at the edge of town, has one- of the best small fruit farms in Decatur county and ships a large amount of fruit to the city markets. SARDINIA. Sardinia, the largest town in Jackson township, was laid out on May 17, 1865, '\^' J- S. Harper and fifteen others. For a number of years J. S. Harper operated one of the largest stores in the state here, but too much credit forced him out of business. The historian was told that when he closed his store he had ninety thousand dollars worth of accounts due him. Certainly no man could keep a business going on such a basis. Harper Ijuilt what is still probably the largest house in the county — a magnificent nine- teen-room, brick mansion, which cost upwards of twenty thousand dollars. He lived in regal style and his many colored servants and lavish entertain- ments are well remembered by the older citizens. As long as he was in the town Harper was its main attraction and with the closing out of his busi- ness the town settled down to a quiet existence which still continues undis- turbed by the whirl of the outside world. The postoffice was formerly called Big Creek. The present interests of the town, few in number, include the following : Barbers, Roscoe McKelvey, Earl McGovern ; blacksmiths, Samuel Ammer- 134 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. man, Albert Cornelius ; flour mill, George Claypool ; general store. IMcXelan & Anderson; grocery, Harry Taggart; hardware, John Gross & Son; hotel, John Bowen ; ice cream parlor, Wilson & Vanblaricum : livery, John Bowen ; saw-mill, John Gross & Son; station agent, W. H. Petree; stock buyer. John Dennison, John Smith. MARION TOWNSHIP. Marion township, originally a part of Washington township and later of Sand Creek township, was organized by authority of the county commis- sioners on May 2, 1831, when its boundaries were defined as follows: "Beginning at the Washington township line on the section line dividing sections 2~ and 28, township 10, range 9; thence north on the section line to the county line ; thence eastwardly with the line of the county and Salt Creek township to the ^Vashington township line ; thence west with the line of Washington township to the place of beginning." The population of Marion township is largely German. The northern half of the township is rolling and in some places the land is rough and broken. The eastern and southern portion is flat and was originally covered with oak, maple and gum. A good share of it is poor woods land. The first church in the township was that of the Immaculate Conception at ^lill- housen, which was erected in 1840, when Maximillian Schneider donated forty acres of land for this purpose. The first school house was also built by the Catholics and was placed close to the church. Maximillian Schnei- der, who was one of the leading spirits in the new community, kept the first store, which was located at Millhousen. Later he sold the store to Barney Hardbeck, who had built the first mill at IMillhousen. The first mill in Marion township was erected by a man named Bush and was located on the banks of Sand creek. SETTLEMENT. The first settlers of Marion township, as indicated by the original land entries, were : John Robbins, Sampson McConnell, Abisha ]\Iatherly, John McConnell, James Parnell, John Hazelrigg, Dilliard Hazelrigg, John Line- ville, Thomas McLaughlin, Jonathan Thompson, Isaac Ricketts, Dudley Anderson, W. White and Thomas Fortune. Other early-comers were John Myres, John and Hiram Fortune, Sarah Anderson, James Hooten. Dudley Taylor and John Morton. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 135 Early German settlers were ;\Iaxiniillian Schneider, Christian Ruhl, Theodore Frey, Frank Rubard, G.eorge and Francis Verkamp, Henry Pulse, Gabriel Pulse, John and Adam Hessler and Theodore Willmer. In another chapter is given an account of the Germans and their part in the county's histor}'. The present officers of Marion township are as follows: Trustee, Dan Holcomb; assessor, Frank \'aske: advisory board, John B. Rolfes, Anthony Schroer and Simeon H. Kennedy; road supervisors, John Vanderpolil, Leonard Alexander and liernard Kohrnian ; William Forket, justice of the peace; William J. Robinson, constable. MILLHOUSEN. Millhousen is a Catholic village located on Squaw run, in Marion town- ship, ten miles southeast of Greensburg. Maximillian Schneider, who set- tled here in 1838, donated forty acres of land on June 29, 1840, to Bishop La Halandiere, of \''incennes, for the purpose of establishing a church and laying out a town. The name ]\Iillhousen was adopted for the proposed town in honor of Mr. Schneider's native town of the same name in Ger- many. The first settlers were composed of emigrants from various parts of Germany, among whom were thirteen families, most of whom were mechan- ics. All were poor and dependent upon their daily labor for subsistence. In 1840 a plain chapel, twenty by twenty-four feet, was erected, and ten years later a larger building, thirty-eight by sixty feet, was built on the same site. In 1857 a parochial school was added. The present church is one hundred and forty by fifty-five feet, and has a beautiful tower in which is a large clock. There have been several business enterprises in the town in the past, but changing conditions have seen the disappearance of most of them. The first store and postoffice was kept by Maximillian Schneider. Barney Harde- beck followed Schneider in the same store. Hardebeck also built the first mill in the town, a woolen-mill which was run under several different man- agements until the early eighties. Other owners of this same mill were B. Zapfe & Brinkman, followed by Zapfe alone. Hardebeck again took charge of the mill after Zapfe and, while he was operating it a second time it was burned. He at once rebuilt it and continued to run it until it was permanently closed down. The town was once larger than it is today and formerly boasted of a population of about four hundred; today there are approximately three 136 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. hundred in the town. The business and professional interests in 1915 in Millhousen are as follows: Barbers. Joseph Pfeifer, John Green; Black- smiths, Edward Henninger, John and Louis Scheidler; brick and stone masons, John Green, Frank Klosterkemper ; carpenters, Theodore Schneider, Anthony Reisman; drugs, Dr. J. C. Glass; flouring-mill, Joseph Herbert & Sons; general store, B. \V. Zapfe, Philomena Moorman; hack line (Mill- housen & Greensburg ) , Andrew Butz ; harness, Joseph Herbert & Sons ; hotel, b'erdinand W'ittkemper ; ice cream parlor, Mrs. IMollie Herbert; livery, Edward Henninger; painter and paper hangers, Joseph Pfeifer, John Her- bert, Anthony Reisman ; photographer, Louis Scheidler ; postmaster, Dr. J. C. Glass; phA'sicians, J. C. Class, Nicholas Bauman; saw-mill, Joseph Her- bert & Sons; tinner, Louis Scheidler; saloons, \\'ill Link, Ferdinand ^Vitt- kemper; wagon makers, George Scheidler, Charles Henninger. Millhousen is not on a railroad and thus is seriously handicapped in various ways. The mail comes daily from Greensburg in a sealed pouch. B. W. Zapfe runs an automobile truck flaily between Millhousen and Greens- burg and hauls all of his goods from the county seat. Zapfe also runs two huckster wagons the year round. The Millhousen Telephone Company, a local concern, has one hundred and twenty-six subscribers. The exchange is now located in B. W. Zapfe's store. The town has three public buildings — a town hall, with a seating capac- ity of one thousand, a solid stone jail, with tw'o cells, and a fire engine house. The town has recently completed four large fire cisterns, which are so located as to provide ample protection for the whole tuwn. Four years ago there was a destructive fire in the town which burned the hotel, saloon and livery stable of John Spander, the store of J. W. Hardebeck and the dwelling house of Barney Koors. The town now has an excellent eight-man-power fire engine, which is capable of throwing water over any liuilding in town. Edward Henninger is the present fire chief. The town was platted on April 10, 1858, and has been incorporated for several years. The town officers for 1915 are as follow: Clerk, Will Dai- ley; councilmen, George Walters, first ward; Edward Henninger, second ward; Anthony Harping, third ward; marshal, John Stuehrenberg. OTHER VILLAGES. Gaynorsville is located in Marion township and, although never platted, is given a place on the county map. There are about ten families in this little village. This is merely a country trading point and its business inter- ST. MAKYS CATHOLIC ClUItCIl, JIILI.HOUSKX. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. ^37 ests, whicli consist of a general store and blacksmith shop, are taken care of by Enoch Parker & Son. Smyrna is also a small hamlet in Marion to\vnslii]i, but only a small cluster of houses marks the place at present. Laytun's mill is only a voting precinct in Marion township. CLINTON TOWNSHIP. On July 6, 1829, on the petition of Isaac Seright and others, the board of justices organized Clinton township, with the following limits : Begin- ning on the county line at the center of section 34, township 12, range 9; thence south to the \\'ashington township line; thence east five miles to the center of section 21, township 11, range 10, on the south line of said section; thence north to the county line ; thence west with the county line to the place of beginning (volume II, page 43). The original limits as prescribed by the board of justices who organ- ized this township, have remained the same with two minor exceptions. On September 7, 1829, the board of justices ordered that sections 19 and 20, township II, range 10, be stricken off from Clinton township and attached to Washington (volume II, page 47). On May 3, 1830, the board of jus- tices "ordered that the west half of section 21, township 11, range 10, which lies in Clinton township, be and the same is newly attached to the township of Fugit in the said county of Decatur." With these changes, the township stands today as its first boundaries were given. The same board which ordered the organization of (Clinton township, at the same meeting ordered the first election to be held in the township at the house of George McLaughlin on the last Saturday in July, 1829. This election was held for the purpose of electing two justices of the peace. Ben- jamin Jones was appointed election inspector. Alexander Hamilton and John Small were appointed as overseers of the jxior for that year (1829). James Hudson, Robert Wilson and Joseph Lindsay were appointed as first fence viewers (volume II, page 44). In 1830, Joseph Lindsay and James Wilson were appointed as overseers of the poor. SETTLEMENT. It is impossible ti.^ determine who was the first settler in this township, but it is improbable that there was anycjne with a fixed jiabitation there 138 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. before 1821. There were no land entries from this township during the first vear after it was open for settlement, which leads to the supposition that there were people living there who wished to protect their claims to their places of residence. The first known settler was Jesse Womack, who entered a small tract of land early in 1821. Others who came immediately afterward were John Montgomer\-, Thomas Craig, Daniel Crume, Joseph Jones and Joseph Wei- hart. Among those who came later this year were Matthew Campbell, Rob- ert Wilson, James Carter, John Thomson, Israel Harris, Henry Glass and George Donner. Among the other early settlers who located here and contributed to the early progress and history- of the township are: Reuben Johnston, who came here from A'irginia with his family, and died in 1857; I^avid ]\Iunns, who was one of the early Kentucky pioneers ; also William Ruddell, from Kentucky; Thomas Power, Robert Crawford, John Lyons, ^\'illiam Sefton, William Bird, Baily Johnston, Josiah Kemble, Elijah E. Smith, Peleg Wheeler, George Butcher, A. E. Rankin, D. Cramer, Benjamin Jones, Philip Martin, Edward Ricketts, Dr. Abram Carter, Gabriel Harrold, William Jones, Robert Wilson, Joseph Lindsay and Andrew J. Dale, wdio came here from South Carolina, are all numbered among the early settlers of the town- ship and contributed toward its settlement and advancement. EARLY MILLS. The first grist-mill in this township was built by John and William Hamilton, two brothers from Virginia, who settled here. This mill was erected in the year 1822 and the power to run the machinery was furnished by Clifty creek. A short time after this mill was erected, another mill, which was only used for cracking corn for feed, was constructed by Thomas Lanham for William Buchanan, the proprietor. This mill was located on the South fork of Clifty creek, and was well patronized by the settlers in this locality, as meal was used more extensively for breadstuff than it is at the present time, .\bout the same time, the first saw-mill was erected by a Mr. Douglas on the south fork of Clifty creek. This mill was well pat- ronized and the owner was doing a thriving business, but his prosperity was to be short-lived, for he met with an accident in the mill which cost him his life. The first horse-power mill was introduced and placed in operation on the farm of Thomas Powell, near the poor farm. Mr. Powell owned and DECATL'R COUNTY, INDIANA. I39 operated this mill for a number of years, and at that time it was quite an advancement from the old form of water-power mill. The county poor farm is located in Clinton township. The first church in the township was built by the Christians. This was erected near the residence of Nathan P. Swails and was known as the Cliftv church. The general surface of this land is unliroken and slightly undulating and there is no great extent of broken land in the township, although it has excellent drainage from the different brandies of Cliftv creek which tluw through the township. The land all drains to the southwest and the soil is uniform and of an equal quality. There is no other township in the county which can boast of so few acres of waste or untillable land as Clinton. The timber furnished one of the greatest industries in this township in the early days, sta\e-mills being the chief consumption of this natural resource. The forests consisted chiefly of walnut, poplar, sugar, elm, burr oak, hackberry and beech, but since the timber has become scarce the ener- gies of the settlers have been turned toward agricultural pursuits, and this is yielding equally as great results as did the timber products of old. The blue grass land in the southeastern portion of the township rivals even the famous blue grass districts of Kentucky, and has no equal in any part of the home state. Another great asset to the farmers of this section is the North Vernon, Greensburg & Rushville railroad, which runs through the townshi]). It enables them to place their products on the markets of the leading cities and furnishes railroad facilities for all the different lines of transportation. The trustee of Clinton township is Henry Mozingo, and Or\ille Garrett is assessor. SANDUSKY. Sandusky, the only town in Clinton township, was laid out along the Michigan division of the Big Four railroad on October 7. 1882, by Olliver C. Sefton. The building of the railroad through the county has made San- dusky a shipping point of importance, especially so since it is the nearest market for most of Fugit and a part of Adams townships. The business interests of 191 5 include the following: Blacksmith, Harrell & Cowan, W. O. Rozell ; carpenter, A. T. Stanford, Stillman Bros., Elmer Ruddell : ele- vator. Sandusky Farmers Elevator Company, Jesse Anderson, manager : general store, Horace McDowell ; hardware and implements, Horace Mc- Dowell : livery, Charles Ray ; painter and paper hanger, Fleetwood & Seright ; 140 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. saw-mill. Steward & Tilley; station agent, A. C. Thorpe; warehouse, H. C. Doles, of Clarksburg. J. T. Stanford operates a stone crusher a short distance from the town and furnishes most of the crushed stone used on the roads in the township. In the spring of 19 15 about forty of the leading farmers of the community surrounding Sandusky formed a company to operate the elevator at the town and are making extensive repairs to the building which they acquired. Thev intend to put in a grinding outfit and handle food stuffs of all kinds. A gas company, composed of Knox, Hall & \\'illiams, has fnur wells, which furnish an abundant supply of gas for the town. They give a flat rate of one dollar a month for a stove and furnish one light. Additional lights cost fifteen cents a month. The county farm, of one hundred and sixty acres, is located a mile southwest of Sandusky. Superintendent D. A. Bur- roughs now has twenty-seven inmates on the farm. Williamstown is a joint Decatur and Rush county town, and is located on the county line in Clinton township. SALT CREEK TOWNSHIP. Salt Creek township bears the distinction of being the last township laid out in the county. It was established by the board of county commis- sioners of Decatur county, September 5, 1836, and, as recorded in the rec- ords of that date, its Ijoundaries were as follow, to wit: "Beginning on the Franklin county line on the line dividing townships 10 and 11 ; thence west to the northwest corner of section 2, township 10, range 10: thence south to the northwest corner of section 26, township 9, range 10; thence east two miles; thence south one mile; thence east to the Ripley county line; thence north to the place of beginning." This was taken verbatim from the record books of the county conmiissioners (volume III, page 104), but there seems to be some discrepancy in this record, as seen l.iy following the line of boundary, for it would not strike the Ripley county line. The error may come in supplying the name Ripley when in fact the Franklin county line was meant. The next record which we have defining the boundary of this township is given as follows, to wit: "Beginning on the Franklin county line on the line dividing townships 10 and 11; thence west to the northwest corner of section 2, township 10, range 10; thence south five miles; thence east two miles; thence south one mile; thence east one mile; thence south one mile JOHN" IIAUDIXU. DOUBLE LOAD OF I'lLKS. 7S FKI-yr L(IN(!. (TT IX DFC .STFU CiVSlX V\ T. E. DAY AND LOADED AT XEWI'OLVT. EOK LSK HY THE KIC KOIU KAl' KOAD AFTEI! THE (JKEAT FLOOD OF I'.lL".. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. I4I to the Ripley county line; thence northeast with the Indian boundary line and north with the Franklin county line to the place of beginning." Although the soil of Salt Creek township is not so productive as that of other subdivisions of Decatur county, its thrifty farmers, most of them of German descent, have brought the land to a state of dependable produc- tion, have erected commodious barns and substantial dwellings, so that, in most respects. Salt Creek township takes a high rank among the nine town- ships of Decatur county. SETTLEMENT. Robert Ross and John Harding were two of the first six men to settle in Salt Creek township. Others who made homes in this township at an early date were : James Cook, William Barclay, Parkinson Barclay, Eli Pen- nington (who later laid out New Pennington), Lewis Castor, Wilson Ross. William Hart, Charles McHugh, John Calicott, Robert Atte, William Walker, Milton Walker, George Osborn and John Snediker. Salt Creek township abounded in game in the days of the early settlements, and the pioneers of this locality never had any trouble getting a supply of bear meat, but, of course, pork was a scarce article until bruin had been exterminated. \\'ild turkeys were seen in the \icinity of New Pen- nington as late as 1875. The general character of the soil of this township is clay. However, it responds readily to scientific farming, so that, with careful attention, it pro- duces a profitable crop every year. Salt Creek township timber is mostly oak and gum, of which a large amount has been sold for the manufacture of furniture. The township was crossed Iiy the Big Four railroad, from east to west, in 1853, this being one of the earliest railroads in the state. Newpnint and Smith's Crossing are located on the railroad. The following are the present oflficers of Salt Creek township: Trustee, Harley S. McKee : assessor, Elza O. Walker : advisory board, W^illiam Schil- ling, Isaac Parmer, Sr., and Henry Travis: road supervisors, Clarence Col- son, Rudolph Kramer and Taylor Ramer; justice of the peace, ^^'illiam Haas. NEWrOINT. The town of Newpoint is located in Salt Creek township nn the Big Four railroad. It was laid out on November 11, 1859, by Ebenezer Nutting and has enjoyed a steady growth from the beginning. A struggling \-illage 142 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. had existed at this place ever since tlie raih-oad had been built in 1854, but it was live years later before it occurred to an enterprising proprietor that it would make a good site for a town. The stone industry has always been the chief business of Newpoint, and the stone cjuarry of J. J. Puttniann, a mile north of town has employed more men than any other enterprise in the com- munity. He has employed many men and has the only cjuarries of import- ance in the township. Among the men earlier connected with the commercial life of Newpoint were : George Brown, Joel Colson, W. E. Earkley. James Hart, Warner Clark, Leander Storks, John Lewis Hilliard. On September 2, 1866, Mr. Hilliard began his long and honest career as a clerk when he sold the first order in the store of W. E. Barkley, which stood on the site of the store now owned by George W. Metz. Joel Colson made to the town of Newpoint the addition which bears his name. From its founding, Newpoint has always been the chief trading" and shipping point in the township and remains so at the present time. The town is incorporated and divided into three wards. The town clerk is Robert Carr, and John VV. Snedeker officiates as marshal. A volunteer fire department is maintained, which has proven equal to every emergency thus far. Three fire cisterns, a hand-power fire engine, hooks, ladders and an ample su]3ply of hose are kept in the town house. A stone jail takes care of such ottenders of the law as need incarceration. The town is well lighted with gas, street lights being located at appropriate intervals all o^■er the town. The Newpoint Gas, Oil and Mineral Company has ten wells in the imme- diate vicinity and sells its gas for fifteen cents a thousand. There is plenty of gas for both light and fuel. John Giberson owns the local telephone line and maintains a switchboard at his home, half a mile northeast of town, which connects with about seventy-five patrons. The White River Cream- ery Company, of Cincinnati, has a shipping station at Newpoint, in charge of Sanford S. Starks. Starks was granted a state license as milk tester by the state examining Ijoard on June 7, 1915. From forty to sixt}- gallons of cream are shipped daily from Newpoint to Cincinnati. The business and professional interests of Newpoint in 191 5 include the following: Bank, Newpoint State Bank; barber, Henry ^^'olf and James Myers; Iilacksmith, George Cornelius and Ephraim Deen ; carpenter, Adam Hoover, James Blaire and Peter Grove ; general store, H. M. Loyd, G. W. Metz, John Hoff and George Myers; grist-mill, Germany & King; har- ness, Benjamin Kaneve ; hardware, J. J. Puttmann & Company ; jeweler, E. F. Starks; liverv, Fred Wolf; meat market, Fred Wolf; millinerv, Mrs. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. I43 Henry Ennebrock ; painter and paper hanger, Robert JMoulton ; physician, Harley S. McKee and Joseph Coomes ; restaurant, Ruth Gouge and Frank Hooten ; saloon, Peter Schuh ; saw-mill, J. J. Puttmann and T. E. Day ; stock buyer, Wolf & Barnard ; wholesale liquor dealer, Greensburg Mercan- tile Company, William McWilliams, manager. The present officers are as follow : Councilnien, George A. Redelman, Henry Ennebrock, A\ Thomas; clerk, Robert Carr: treasurer, Will Thomas, smith's crossing. Smith's Crossing is now only a flag station on the Big Four railroad. It is situated in Salt Creek township, about two miles west of NewjKiint. This little hamlet was laid out, January 2, 1859, by R. S. Ward. I'or many years a postoffice was maintained here under the name of Wintersville. but it was discontinued with the establishment of the rural free deliver}-. There are only three or four houses in the place at present, and the only Iinsincss interest is the store of Mrs. Edward Little. other villages. There are three small places in Salt Creek township which ai)pcar on the maps of Decatur as towns, but none of them can hardly be said to deserve the title now. The first of these is Mechanicsburg, which was laid out by Robert Garrison and others, October 10, 1846. The next is New Pen- nington, which was laid out by Eli Pennington in 185 1 and licars the founder's name. Last, but not necessarily least, comes Rossburg, which was laid out by D. Montague, founder of the, town of St. IMaurice, March 16, 1836. SAND CREEK TOWNSHIP. Sand Creek township was organized by the board of justices on May 2, 1825, with the following boundaries : "Beginning at the county line on the township line dividing townships 9 and 10, range 8; thence east seven miles; thence north two miles to the line of Washington township; thence due east with the said township line to the county line; thence south (with a westerly direction) with the county line to the southwest corner of the county; thence north with the county line to the place of beginning." On 144 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. July 6, 1829, on the petitii)]! of Francis JNIyers, the Ijoard ordered "tlial sec- tions 30 and 31 in township 10, range 9, be attached to and made a part of Sand Creek township." Sand Creek township was formed from the southern part of Wash- ington, and, like W'ashingtnn, in its original boundaries was much larger than it is at present. As established originally, it embraced the townships of Sand Creek, Jackson, Marion and a portion of Salt Creek, but between the years 1825 and 1836 its boundaries were greatly reduced by the formation of the latter t(_)wnshii>s. The ])resent limits of this townsliip have injt been reached through a definite location of its own boundaries, but by the l)()un(l- aries of the townships which were established from its territory and Ijound it on three sides. The present limits are as follow : "Beginning at the Jennings county line, on the section line dividing sections 9 and 10, town- ship 8, range 9 ; thence north to the Washington township line : thence west from the northeast corner of section 28, township 10, range 9, two miles; thence south two miles to the northeast corner of section 6, township 9, range 9; thence west two miles and a half to the center of section 2 on the north side thereof; thence south to the Jennings county line; thence east on the Jennings county line to the place of beginning." As a whole. Sand Creek township is uneven and contains several kinds of soil, from rich black lands on the Sand Creek bottoms to the poor land common in Salt Creek and Marion townships. Part of the township is very hilly and broken. FIRST SETTLERS. Elijah Davis was the first settler in Sand Creek township, so far as can be ascertained. He took out a claim in 1820, the only man to do so that year. In 182 1 three others bought government land and made homes for themselves in this township. The}- were Daniel Herron, Xat Robbins and William Robbins. Four years later, when the township was organized, it had grown but little in po]julation, as but nine votes were cast in the first township election held in 1825 for the office of justice of the peace. Just one-third of the male population that had reached the age of twenty-one was then willing to ser\e the public, there being three candidates for the office. Nat Robbins was elected. James Holmes, John Bagley, Robert Courtney and Samuel Stevens are supposed to have settled in Sand Creek township during the same year, but if they did, they merely "squatted" until they could raise sufficient cash to DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. I45 purchase government land. Other early settlers were John Robbins, Simeon Sharp, Daniel Meredith, William Schultz, John Cann and Samuel De Armond. Samuel Stevens built a l;)rick house in 1834 and about the same time Simeon Sharp opened a tavern where Westport now stands. Elijah Davis and J(_>hn Robbins both started water-mills and some time after William Robbins built a horse-mill, so that the early settlers were not altogether dependent upon the waters of Sand creek and Millstone creek for their bread. The first church in the township was organized by Samuel Strick- land, of the denomination then styled "Campbellites." The present officers of Sand Creek township are as follow: Trustee, James Armstrong; assessor, Jesse Blauvelt; road supervisors, James L. Gay- nor, first district; Ransom O. Davis, second district; Charles Brannon, third district, and James McFall ; advisory board, George M. Keith, John A. Jack- son, \\'illiam A. Barclay; James R. Scott, justice of the peace. WESTPORT. Westport is located in Sand Creek township on the North \^ernon, Greensburg & Rushville and the Chicago, Terre Haute & Eastern Railroads. This little village was laid out on March J3, 1836, by Simeon Sharp and Hockersmith Merriman, and has enjoyed a steady growth from the begin- ning. A marked proof of the growth is shown by the fact that it was nec- essary to lay out an addition in 1838 for the accommodation of people who wished to locate here. This was made by John Cann, and other additions followed soon after. The first house was Ijuilt in the ti)\vn Ijy William Shultz, who also kept the first store. Mr. Shultz seems to have been a man of many trades and callings, for he is also accredited with Ijeing the first physician in West- port. Frank Talkington was the first blacksmith to ply his trade here. John Conwell served as the first postmaster. \Vestport is noted for its excellent stone quarries in close proximity to the town. The product of these quarries is a high-grade building stone, which will bear favorable comparison with that of any other section of the state. It is also used quite extensively for curb and gutter, and many car loads of crushed stone are shipped from the quarries annually. .\t present it is under the management of a Cincinnati corporation and bears the name of the Westport Stone Company. John Ballman, of Cincinnati, is the pres- ent superintendent and he is ablj- assisted by J. L. Jackson, of Westport. (10) 146 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. The output varies from three to five carloads per day and in times of rush orders for crushed stone as much as sixty to seventy carloads extra are put out per month. This has been one of the greatest factors in making West- port among the most progressive business towns of the county. BUSINESS DIRECTORY. The Imsiness and professional interests in Westport in 1915 are as fol- low : Barber, Rousie Boicourt, J. N. Keith : bank. First National Bank ; bakery, Westport bakery, Jacob Bacher, manager; basket maker, W. J. Richardson ; blacksmith, Carl Keith ; contractor, Moir and Davis, James E. Burk, Benjamin Benifield; drug store, Conwell and Harding; dentist, F. M. Davis ; furniture and undertaking, J. F. Hamilton Furniture Com- pany; general store, George B. Hendrickson, Frank Manuel, J. T. McCul- lough, W. T. Stott & Co. ; garage, Ned Burney ; grocery, Pete Barnes ; hard- ware, Westport Hardware Company, Cox and McGinnis, managers; Whalen & Ostymer; grain company, Tyner Grain Company, Glen Gartin, man- ager; hotel. Joe Tucker, Eva Lowe; harness, C. E. Pierce; insurance, Levi Burns, T. W. Robinson; jeweler, H. J. Riedenbach; li\ery barn, Albert Rob- bins; milliner store, Etta Boicourt; meat market, J. H. Retherford; optician, J. i\L Burk; paper hanger, Bert Ross, E. A. Shaw; physician, O. F. W^elch, Charles Wood, J. A. C. Reiley, J. P. Borroughs; plasterer, Samuel Grayson; plumber, Walter Waterman; restaurant and confectionery, H. D. Richard- son, William McCuUough; shoe cobbler, B. P. Rogers; tailor, Rogers; stock buyer, Mr. Tyner; undertaker, J. F. Hamilton; veterinary, Claude Keith; wagon maker and wood worker, Frank Pope; watchmaker, J. M. Burk; Westport Stone Compan\- ; Westport Amusement Company, Alex Cornutt, manager. There are few towns in this section of the country which present in their business associations a more reliable and intelligent class of men, or whose enterprise is more clearly rewarded ])y an established and growing trade, than Westport. Although its population may not be so large as other towns with which it competes, yet its aggregated commercial transactions will scarcely be found excelled by any town of its class in the state. It is accommodated by two railroads which give it an excellent outlet to the dif- ferent commercial centers. J. L. Houston acts as agent for the Big Four and Charles Hunt serves in a like capacity for the Chicago, Terre Haute & Southeastern (Southern Lidiana). W. S. Sanders is the postmaster and three rural routes serve the country people with mail from Westport. The DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. I47 Courier Independent, managed by J. M. Keith, furnishes the community with local items of interest and also aids in every way possible in boosting the interests of the town. The town was incorporated in 1859 for civic and school purposes. The following are the present town officials: R. D. Patrick, clerk; Ed Whalen, treasurer: J. H. Retherfcjrd, Joe Tucker and Carl Davis, councilmen; school board, John Morris, president; Benjamin Gunder, secretary; Edward Davis, treasurer. A volunteer fire department is maintained, with E. G. Davis as chief, and has rendered excellent service on every occasion which has arisen that demanded their service. A hand-power fire engine, hose truck, hooks, ladders and an ample supply of hose are kept in tlie town engine house. In K)io the town suffered a very disastrous fire which destroyed a hotel and livery barn, hardware store, opera house, millinery store and dwelling. The total loss was estimated at fifteen thousand dollars, but this fire-swept dis- trict was soon rebuilt with modern and much more substantial buildings. In 1913 the corporation purchased a town hall of the Red Men. The second floor is used for meetings, but the first floor is used for the fire apparatus. \Vestport has a Standard Oil station, which is under the management of George Kelley. At present the town has a population of eight hundred. Recently a Commercial Club has been formed, to promote the civic and moral improvement of the town and also aid in any commercial enterprise which may desire to locate here. LETTS. The village of Letts, situated on the Michigan division of the Big Four railroad, was laid out on September 30, 1882, by Joab Stout and others. Letts is one of the late towns laid out in this county and has had a very pros- perous existence in its thirty-three years of life. It is situated in the center of a rich farming land and each year its exports in grain are enormous. Recently two new store buildings were erected, which add to the prosperous business atmosphere of the town. The business interests of Letts in 1915 are as follow: Barber, H. L. Williams; blacksmith, J E. Carder; bank, Letts State Bank; contractor, Moore & Crise; elevator, Moore & Crise; garage, J. E. Carder, also gasoline station and sub-agency for Buick cars; general merchandise, W. A. Taggart & Company, Letts Merchandise Company, John McCammon, manager ; hard- ware, Letts Hardware Company. K. L. Adams, manager; hotel, J. Henry 148 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Gibson & Sons; lix'ery and feed 1)arn, J. Henry Gibson & Sons; harness shop, Samuel Ketcliam ; physician, J. A. Welch ; restaurant, Alice Gardner. The postmaster is George W. Davis. The railroad station is known l)y the name of Letts Corner and O. E. Hedrick is the agent. Letts is sup- plied with ice by the Meek Ice Company, from Greensburg, which makes trips once a week. The population of the t(Avn is estimated at three hunilred. HARRIS. No town in Decatur county has experienced a greater change in the past qviarter of a century than Harris City, which was once the center of the larg- est blue-limestone quarry of stratified rock in the state, if not in the United States. From this quarry have been shipped thousands of car loads of stone and when it was in the height of its prosperity it frequently turned out more than a hundred car loads of stone a week. Three hundred people were dependent on the operation of the quarry and the busy hum of indus- try which pervaded the place was an apparent indication that the place would one day become a town of some importance. But today it is all changed. The quarry has closed down ; the few remaining houses are nearly all deserted; the once neat homes of the thrifty German laborers are surrounded with sweet clover; the din of the hammer is stilled; the cheery ring of the blacksmith's anvil no longer greets the ear; the towering derricks, the smoking engines, the hurrying feet of the hundreds of employees — all have disappeared. Where once massive blocks of stone were piled waiting for the skilled hands of the workmen, may now be seen a waving field of fragrant sweet clover. This is the simple narrative of the energy and enthusiasm of one man — and this is the story : Morgan's men were riding through the counties of southern Lidiana in July, 1863, and some of them chanced to pass by what is now Harris City. One of these same men must have been looking for a future place to locate, or at least one of them returned to Decatur count\' immediately after the close of the Civil War and made a close examination of the spot which had attracted his attention on that hot sultry day in July, 1863. This man was B. B. Harris, the founder of the town which bore his name and the man who was responsible for the opening of tlie (juarry which was destined to become one of the largest of its kind in the whole country. By 1869 Harris had the quarry opened and was turning out considerable stone, although he was badly handicapped because he was so far from a DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 149 railroad. However, the possibilitie.s of the quarry were so apparent tliat he had Httle (Hfficulty in organizing a hundred thousand dollar company in 1873. The compan}' made Harris president and manager and five years later the business had reached such dimensions that it was deemed impera- tive to build a spur of track to Greensburg, six miles away. The right of way, the Iniilding of the track and the purchase of a railroad engine entailed an expenditure of fifty thousand dollars, but the increased business brought about by the better shipping facilities was sufficient to pay for the heavy out- lay. The company had secured a contract for a large amount of stone to be used in the new state house at Indianapolis and this fact was largely responsible for the building of the railroad to Greensburg. In fact, they could not have taken the contract without so doing. At the same time they were furnishing stone for the United States custom house at Cincinnati. Three thousand carloads of stone went out from this quarry for the state house and six thousand for the Cincinnati custom house. At least ten thous- sand car loads of this stone was sold to Proctor & Gamble for their immense soap factory at Ivorydale, a suburb of Cincinnati. The company also fur- nished the stone for the abutments of the Chesapeake & Ohio bridge at Cin- cinnati and the stone for hundreds of other railroad bridges. The stone for the cells in the Mansfield, Ohio, reformatory were cut in this quarry and smoothed with chilled shot in the local yartls. There is no machinery which will smooth this stone on account of its excessive hardness, and all the stone had ti) be smoothed by hand. The company built thirty-seven houses for its employees and erected a large three-story boarding house which would accommodate two hundred men. The business prospered until the latter part of the nineties, Ijut the hard times of 1897, combined with the poor management of Harris, forced the company into bankruptcy. In the following year W. C. Patton took charge of the quarry and operated it until 1904, when S. B. Eward became the sole owner and manager. Eward had lieen connected with the cmupany since the beginning and was thoroughly familiar with every detail of the business, having for many years been the treasurer. Eward continued to operate the quarry until his death, December 31, 1914, although very little stone was fpiarried for a few years before his death. The use of cement had made such heavy inroads into the business that the sale had dropped sharply away. In addition, the e([uipment was getting old, the track was too light to stand the heavy freight cars which had come into use, and, in short, the quarr}- was closed for the simple reason that it had ceased to be a profitable enterprise with the present demand and prices. The tjuarry and 150 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. the one hundred and fift_\'-three acres of the old company are now the prop- erty of L. D. Eward. of Greensburg. In 1914 thirty-one of the houses of Harris were moved away. The store is owned by Mr. Eward, after having passed through several hands in the past quarter of a century. What the future of the quarry may be is entirely problematical ; the stone is still there in abundance, only eleven acres of stone having been removed. In order to put the (juarry in operation again it would be necessary to rebuild the rail- road track to the quarry switch, a distance of four and a half miles, and install a complete equipment for getting out the stone. Undoubtedly the quarry will be opened some day, but only the future can tell when the black- smith's anvil will again ring. Until then the fragrant sweet clover will reign undisturlicd antl the silence will be broken only l)y the wa}-farer who stops to inquire what village once occupied this picturesque spot. SARD1N.\ CROSSING. Sardina Crossing is a flag stop on the Big Four Railroad. A postoffice was maintained here for a number of years and bore the name of Harpers, but the rural free delivery has long since taken its place and at present noth- ing remains to mark the town. WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP. On May 14, 1822, the county commissioners established Washington township with the following limits: Beginning at the county line on the line dividing townships 10 and 11; thence west with said line to the south- west corner of section 35, range 10, township 11; thence north with the line dividing sections 34 and 35 to the southwest corner of section 26; thence west with the section line to the southwest corner of section 28, range 10, township 1 1 ; thence north with said section line to the southwest corner of section 16, range 10, township 11; thence west with the section line to the southwest corner of section 14, range 9, township 11; thence south with the line dividing sections 22 and 2^ to the southwest corner of section 23, range 9, township 11; thence west to the southwest corner of section 21, range 9, township 11; thence south with the line dividing sections 28 and 29 to the township line dividing townships 10 and 11 ; thence west with the said line to the county line; thence south with the county line to the southwest corner of said county; thence with the county line to the place of beginning. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 151 Washington township as originally laid out embraced the entire south- ern half of the county and contained more square miles of territory than Adams and Fugit combined. It comprised the territory from which the townships of Washington, Sand Creek, Marion, Jackson, Clay and a part of Salt Creek were later formed. On May 2, 1825, the board of justices re-defined the limits of Wash- ington township as follow : Beginning at the county line on the township line di\'iding townships 10 and 11, range 11; thence west on the township line to the southwest corner of section 35; thence north one mile; thence west two miles ; thence north one mile ; thence due west seven miles to the north- west corner of section 29, range 9, township 11; thence south six miles to' the southwest corner of section 20, range 9, township 10; thence due east to the county line; thence with the county line to the place of beginning (volume I, page 136). But this was not to be the final boundary of this township, for, in 1836, Salt Creek township was organized and Washington underwent another change of boundary. The limits of the township as permanently defined are as follow: "Beginning at the northwest corner of section 29, township 11, range 8; thence south six miles on the section line dividing sections 29 and 30, township II, range 8, to the northwest corner of section 29, township 10, range 9 ; thence east nine miles to the Salt Creek township line ; thence north on the section line dividing sections 22 and 2t„ township 10, range 10, to the northeast corner of section 34, township 9, range 10; thence west two miles ; thence north two miles ; thence south one mile ; thence west to the place of beginning." Washington was one of the three original townships laid out by the board of county commissioners of Decatur county, when it held its first meeting at the home of Thomas Hendricks, May 14, 1822. The two other townships were Fugit and Adams. The board fixed the first day of June as the date for holding a township election for selection of two justices of the peace and fixed the place for holding it at the residence of Thomas Hen- dricks. Richard J. Hall was appointed inspector. This township is located in almost the exact center of the county and contains fifty-four square miles of territory. According to the census reixsrt of 1910, the entire population of the township, exclusive of the city of Greensburg, was one thousand four hundred and eight. The entire town- ship is underlaid with a lied of limestone, which has proved of utmost value in the construction of highways. On account of the good roads, the productivity of the soil, and nearness 152 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. to the county seat and shipping faciHties, land in Washington township has always commanded a high price in the real estate market. Most of the farms have good l)uildings and are well improved. As a result, farms frequently sell at one hundred and fifty dollars an acre and even higher figures. FIRST SETTLERS. The first settlers of the township were Thomas Hendricks, Elijah Davis and Benjamin Drake. Thomas Ireland, Samuel Logan and Samuel Hous- ton came about the same time. Houston was a surve_\'or and is supposed to have been the first justice of the peace in Washington township. He died a few years after the organization of the county. Hendricks himself was a surveyor and had sur\-e_\'ed the greater por- tion of Decatur county for the federal government in i8jo. when engineers had been sent out to run lines through the "New Purchase." His assistants were Houston, the two Stewarts, Logan and Sam Gageljy. He was by all odds the leading spirit in the new communit}', as he came of stock richly endowed l)y nature for leadership. He was a brother of William Hendricks, second governor of Indiana, and an uncle of Thomas A. Hendricks, later vice-president of the Laiited States. He built the first house, conducted the first tavern therein, and later opened the first h(jtel in the county on the site of the present De.Vrmond Hotel. He entered the first land in \\'ashington township in October, 1820. About the same time. Re\-. James Lathrop, a Vermonter, who had reached Dearljorn county, entered land in Washington township and then went back to Dearborn county to bring on his family to the new settlement. While making preparations for his removal, he fell ill and died. The respon- sibilities of the head of the family of ten children then fell upon his son, Ezra, father of Rev. James B. Lathrop. Ezra Lathrop, with a }-ounger brother and a hired man, then came to W'ashington county and made preparations for caring for the remainder of the family, when it should arri\-e. In the spring of 182 1 the widow and family came to Decatiu" county and settled on land that had been entered by her husl)and and improved, through erection of a log caliin, bv her sons. Xcxt among the early settlers came Henry H. Talbott, a young \'ir- ginian, who ])rom])tly made love to and married one of the five Hendricks daughters. The two Stewart brothers had previously formed matrimonial alliances with the Hendricks famil}-. Talbott possessed an excellent educa- tion and was unusually adept with a pen. He was clerk of the county for a DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 1 53 long period, and his early records are still considered marvels in penmanship. Talbott was an unusually talented representative of a type that made its presence felt in each new community in the days of county organization. The\' were the seekers after office, and early records of Indiana counties show that it was a very common custom for politicians failing to land jobs, in one county when it was organized, to quit the county and try their luck again in the ne.xt one organized. Talhott, however, had not yet attained his majority when he came to Washington township. Talbott and Robert Murphy, who came with him, boarded at the Hendricks house. Talbott brought some goods with him and started a store, which may have been the tirst one in the township, although this distinction is also claimed for a man named Riley. The next newcomer was David Gageby, who had resided at Vernon. He started a cabinet shop on the northwest corner of the public square. He was later joined by his brother James. David then turned his attention exclusively to carpenter work, leaving the management of the shop to his brother. Other early settlers were Martin and John Jamison, hat- ters. In 1821, William Lloyd settled on what is now called the ]\Iadison road, about two miles south of Greensburg. He brought with him from Jefferson county, where he had stopped a few months, a numljer of hogs and cattle. Rattlesnakes killed off a good many of the cattle and a good share of the hogs wandered away into the woods and were lost. Thomas Perry emigrated from Bath county, Kentucky, to Washington township in 1823 and settled four miles east of Greensburg. Samuel and John McConnell, two other Kentuckians, also came about the same time. Both were powerful and muscular and possessed great physical courage. It is related that, while li\'ing "on the dark and bloodv ground," Jnhn McCon- nell was once beset by two Indians. He whijjped them both and took away from one a very business-like war club, which he presented as a trophy of the encounter. Others who found homes for themselves in Washington township before the organization of the county were Rev. John Strange, John House, Samuel Anderson, Jeptha Conner, William Bell, Daniel McCormick, Joseph English, John Messinger and David Messinger. Most of these settled in the southeastern part of the township. .Still others who settled in the town- ship about this time were : .\braham Garrison, Thomas Chinn, Benjamin \A'alker, Benjamin Drake, Otha White, Paris Aldrich, George Hopkins, Robert Elder, John Hazelrigg, Matthew, William and James Elder, Thomas Doles, John and Elijah Davis and John Robbins. Before John McConnell settled here, the land he later occupied was 154 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. held In' a squatter named Gartin. William Ross, first sheriff of the county, and William Parks, a member of the first lioard of county commissioners, were among the earliest to arrive. Washington township has two villages marked on the map. The first of these is McCoy, which was platted on August ii, 1871, by J. C. Adams, but this failed to materialize and at present nothing remains to give sem- blance to a town. Quarry Switch was the point where the switch from Harris connected with the Big Four. At this point the Big Four branches, the Columbus, Hope & Greensburg branch going west and the Michigan branch going south. The officers of Washington township are as follow : Trustee, Charles S. Williams; assessor, Henry C. Snell; advisory board, Dan S. Perry, Joseph B. Kitchen, Charles I. Ainsworth; board of super\'isors, P. L. Doles, Oliver A. McCoy and Nathan A'andivier; justices of the peace, William W. Dixon and Thomas W. Hamilton; constables, William Dorsey and Reuben Smalley. CHAPTER VI. THE CITY OF GREENSBURG. SONG OF AN INLAND TOWN. Apropos of the Flood of 1913. If I could write a poem like Jim Riley ust to write, If I could ketch his rhymin' scheme in which the words unite With a movin' kind o' music that'll start your sluggish blood — I would sing a song of Greensburg where we didn't have no flood. The scen'ry 'long ole Gas Creek don't compare with Brandywine, And we're glad the bloomin' Wabash and Ohio, broad and fine, And the other ragin' rivers are miles and miles away — Ruther be an "inland town" — kind o' like it thataway. A little taste o' trou1;)le 'mong our neighbors, left and right. Helps us 'preciate our home town more'n oratory might. When the trains are kind o' backward and we're missin" half our mail. When the juice is off the cable and the rust is on the rail. Then we realize the blessin's and the comfort's that we've got — There may be places just as, good, but there's heaps o' them that's not. We hev counted all our noses and we've called our little roll. And there's nary one a missin', not a single bloomin' soul. Now the streams are in their channels and the trains are comin' back, And the juice has hit the trolley and the rust is off the track. — Smiley Foivler. The original plat of Greensburg was located on the southeast quarter of section 2, township 10 north, range 9 east. This tract was entered by Thomas Hendricks on October 27, 1820, and there is little doubt but), that this shrewd Yankee selected this particular tract because he thought it would be near the center of a county, which would be organized within the the next few years. At that time the territory now within Decatur county was a part of Delaware county, then unorganized. Franklin county had 156 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. civil and criminal jurisdiction over this part of Delaware county, and all marriage licenses and town plats are found recorded in the court house at Brookville up until Decatur county was organized, in the spring of 1822. Greensburg was laid out on August 26, 1822, by John B. Potter, and, so tradition says, was named, at the request of Mrs. Thomas Hendricks, in honor of her old home town in Pennsylvania. An interesting story is told regarding the naming of the town. Mrs. Hendricks had four charming daughters, all unmarried, and the question of the selection of the name for the new town was left to a vote of the men of the town, most of whom were unmarried. Seventeen of these men were young unmarried fellows and the desire to stand in the good graces of the four handsome daughters was the decisive factor in the selection of the name of Greensburg. The act providing for the organization of the county made provision for a commission of five men to locate the county seat, and this commission reported on June 14, 1822. that they had selected Greensburg as the seat of justice. Thus the hopes of Hendricks were realized and the first settler had the satisfaction of knowing that he had been fortunate enough to enter the tract on which the future county seat was to be located. Unfortunately, records are not available which will disclose the early history of the town. It takes no stretch of the imagination to picture the log cabins which clustered around the public square. In fact, it was not until i860 that the last log house on the public square was razed. It stood on the west side of the square, north of the alley, and had been occupied for many years by W. T. Green as a chair factory. The lot is now occupied by the meat market of McCormick & Richey. It is interesting to note the prices paid for the first lots sold in the embryonic city. On July 28, 1822, the county board of justices appointed John D. Potter "to proceed immediately to laying ofT the town of Greens- burg, to-wit : Public square in the center and lots extending two squares north, two squares east and two squares west." He laicl off sixty-four lots, eighty by one hundred and sixty feet. He was ordered to have thirty-five acres grubbed, although the persons doing this work had to agree to wait one year for their pay. The sale of lots took place on the first Monday of Septem- ber, 1822, and on that date thirty-six lots were sold, most of them being around the public square, although a few were sold on Broadway, Franklin and North streets. The highest price paid for a single lot was the one now occupied by the DeArmond hotel, the drug store of Joseph Moss and Eubanks' grocery. Thomas Hendricks bought this lot for one hundred and twenty-one dollars. The cheapest lot brought twelve dollars and forty-six DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 1 57 cents and is now occupied by Dr. J. H. Alexander on East North street. The lot on which Col. Thomas Green's home stands brought twenty-four dollars, thirty-seven and one-fourth cents. The lot occupied by Wirt Woodfill's store, the Kessler bakery, the Habig real estate office and the Knights of Pythias block was sold to Barlow Aldrich for eighty and a half dollars. However, he repented of this rash act in bidding so liberally and refused to give a note for the same. This lot was later sold at a private sale. The thirty-si.x lots sold on this first day Isrought one thousand, five hundred and seventy-two dollars and eighty-one and one-fourth cents. The records dis- close the fact that not one of the lots is in the hands of any of the heirs of the man who bought it at this sale. It was not until the May tenn, 1823, of the county board that Thomas Hendricks received the residue of the thirty dollars, forty and one-fourth cents which he charged the board for surveying the town and for whiskey which he furnished the agents on the days of the sale of the lots. EARLY GROWTH. The town had a steady growth from the beginning, and, on February 4, 1837, fifteen years after it was laid out, it was incorporated by an act of the Legislature. James Blair, Caleb Luther, Isaac House, John Thom- son, James Freeman, James Lusk and William B. Ewing were appointed to serve as trustees until January, 1838. The legislative act further provided that tippling houses should not be licensed for less than three nor more than ten dollars a year. From a local paper of 1844, it has been ascertained that the most prom- inent business concerns of Greensburg at that time were as follow: D. Stewart & Sons, drugs and groceries ; A. G. Stout & Company, general store ; W. P. & J. F. Stevens, dry goods ; Henry Sef ton, plow maker ; Lathrop & Cooley, hat factory; J. & W. W. Freeman, general merchants; Bryan & Hueston, Fors}'th & Gilham, Hall & Callen, tailors; John IMackey, saddler; Belmont & Ricketts, cabinet makers ; Robinson & Houser, carriage l^uilders ; I. T. Gibson, grocery ; J. S. Scobey, J. & S. W. Robinson and S. Over- turf, attorneys. A gazeteer of 1845 credits Greensburg with a population of twelve hundred and says that the flourishing town had seven blacksmith shops, employing a total of seventeen men ; four wagon shops, employing ten men ; four shoe shops, with eight men ; two cabinet shops ; two tan yards and two carding machines. J 58 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. QUEER REGULATIONS. Some ludicrous ordinances have been gleaned from the old records of Greensburg. In 1857, an ordinance was passed limiting the speed of all vehicles to four miles an hour, and it appears to have been more rigorously enforced than the speed laws of today. The records disclose one citizen who drew a fine of one dollar for venturing to drive at a perilous speed of more than four miles an hour down the main street. This ordinance soon disappeared, however, and the citizens were free to travel on the streets at a more rapid pace. In 1861 an ordinance forbade owners of hogs to permit them to run at large unless they had rings in their snouts. Old residents tell how the pigs of the citizens around the public square rooted for grub worms in the court house yard. Convenient mud holes were provided on the streets around the public square for the pleasure of the hogs. In 1862, Marshal Eudaily took up some hogs belonging to G. B. Roszell for not wearing the required rings in their snouts and advertised the ringless porkers for sale. Before the day of the sale, however, the owner slipped the hogs out of town, and for a time the city meditated liringing suit. INCORPORATION. Greensburg was incorporated as a city in 1859, and the first city election resulted as follows: Mayor, R .B. Thomson; clerk, F. M. Weadon; treasurer, B. H. Harney; assessor, Amos Sparks; engineer, D. Batterton; marshal, George Pilling ; councilmen : first ward, D. Lovett and Thomas Sef ton ; second ward, D. Moss and I. T. Phares ; third- ward, J. A. Boyer and Henry Doles ; school trustee, B. W. Wilson. The corporation has grown steadily from year to year since that time and fully merits the title of city. As its railroad facilities have improved, factories of various kinds have been located in the city, and today thousands of dollars are paid out weekly to workmen in a score or more establishments. The se\-en thousand people who claim Greensburg as their home are justly proud of its industrial position, of its schools and churches, its well-managed public utilities, its enterprising merchants and the general high standard of citizenship which prevails. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. I S^ij FIRE DEPARTMENT. The Greensburg- fire department was organized in 1874, with Arthur Hutchison serving as the first chief. This was a volunteer company, made up of three hundred men, who served without any remuneration for their services. A liand-power engine and one thousand feet of leather hose were purchased for six thousand flollars. Later, each volunteer fireman who was a property holder was exempt from taxes to the value of seven dollars and fifty cents, but non-property holders received nothing for their services. Some years later a horse was purchased to pull the hose reel, but the hook-and-ladder was still pulled by hand. After the citv waterworks was installed in 1889, the engine was disbanded and a new wagon and hose were purchased. The fire chiefs who have served since Mr. Hutchison are as follow : D. C. Elder, Ralph Buckley, W. I. Johnson, W. S. Harvey, James Randall, W. I. Johnson and the present incumbent, Joseph Kelly. Tom Morgan drove the first team and he was followed by Dick Morgan, William Weathers. Bill Dwire drove the hose reel wagon and was followed by Bud Alyea, Bud Short and Link Beeson. The present drivers are James Robbins, driver of the hook-and-ladder wagon, and Robert Alexander, driver of the hose wagon. These men stay in the fire-engine house and receive sixty dollars per month. Mr. Isaacs was the first engineer and was followed by Mat Jackson, Billy Tussey and William Kirkpatrick, who served until the water- wcjrks was put in. The present volunteer fire department consists of the chief, assistant chief and sixteen members of the squad. The chief receives one hundred and twnty-five dollars per year for his services, the assistant chief receives seventy-five dollars and the members of the squad receive si.xty dollars. A complete list of the fires is kept. From 1882 until 1902. there were two hundred and forty fires. The year 1893 had the greatest number in any single year. There were twenty-four in that year, seven of which came in August, two on the loth and two on the nth. POLICE DEPARTMENT. The police department in Greensburg began with one marshal, who, alone, kept the quiet and peace of the town for a number of years. Later, another man was added to the force and two men served in the capacity until 1904. George Dickey was the first chief, with four men under his l60 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. charge. He began his term as chief in 1906, and served for four years, although he was on the force for eight years. W. I. Johnson, the present chief, was appointed by the mayor in 1910. John Louden is the day pohce- man, wlio assists the chief. James Underwood and Harry Lacey serve as night men at the present time. The headquarters of the poHce force are located in the city hall. WATERWORKS. The Greensburg waterworks was organized in 1S89, and the plant was completed in 1890. The Greensburg waterworks is a private corporation, with the following officers : David A. Meyer, president ; Harry Emmert, vice- president and general manager: J. B. Kitchin, secretary and treasurer; Will H. Robbins and ^V. W. Woodfill, who complete the board of directors. The water is taken from thirty wells, which are the property of this company. The entire cost of the plant is placed at two hundred thousand dollars. Two large reservoirs, with a capacity of one million gallons, are provided in case of fire and also to insure a surplus supply. There are eighteen miles of mains, which cover the entire town and furnish water for private use and also for factories, railroads, etc. A direct-puminng system is used and two pressure pumps, with one and one-half million gallons capacity per day, respectively, have been installed. This company furnishes its patrons with water at a flat rate or by meter. STREET PAVING. The first street pa^•ing in Greensburg was done in 1909, when Alain street was paved with lirick throughout its entire length of one and one- eighth miles. An interesting fact concerning the paving of this street relates to that part traversed by the interurban traction line. The track had been laid several years previously, but there seems to have been nothing in the franchise which they got from the city of Greensburg to compel them to pave their own tracks. Neither was the traction company compelled to do any repairing along their right of way. In 1913, Broadway, Franklin and part of North streets were paved with tarvia. The other streets of the city are well graded and macadamized. CITY HALL. The Greensburg city hall is located on the west side of South Broadway, in the first block off the public square. It is a brick structure and was -/- DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. l6l erected in 1874 at a cost of eight thousand dollars. It is two stories in height, the first floor being devoted to the fire department and the second floor to various city offices. Tlie mayor, chief of pohce and city clerk have private rooms, while there are bedrooms for the drivers of the fire-trucks. The largest room is the council chamber, which also serves as a city court room. SEWERAGE SYSTEM. Greensburg began the installation of a sewerage sy.stem several years ago and has added to it as the corporation limits were extended and the population increased. Owing to the fact that the city is not on a water- way, it has been compelled to pro\'ide an artificial means for the disposal of its sewerage. This is done in what is known as a disposal plant, which was installed in 1906-7, at a cost of eighteen thousand dollars, and has proven very satisfactory. The disposal plant takes care of the sewerage by auto- matic syphons, and for this reasim the plant does not need the constant atten- tion of an attendant. The street commissioner, who has general charge of the plant, makes daily trips to it in order to see that it is working properly. BUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY IN I915. Abstractor;; — P. T. Lambert. J. H. Parker. Agricultural Implements — Bonner, Hart & Ryan; H. O. Craig & Com- pany. Art Studio— H. M. Aultman, J. W. Beck. Attorneys — T. E. Davidson, J. K. Ewing, Oscar G. Miller, Goddard & Craig, E. E. Hite, Tremain & Turner, Lewis A. Harding, William F. Rob- bins, Osborn & Hamilton, J. H. Parker, M. C. Jenkins, F. Gates Ketchum, Roy E. Glidewell. Auctioneers — Earl Storms, A. F. Eubank, Earl Gartin. Automobile Dealers — E. E. Arbuckle, Roy Privett, Mrs. C. C. Low, Harlan Overleese, Miss Anna Stewart, E. C. Phelps. Auto Garage — Goyert's Rapid Garage and Auto Agency, Frank Mc- Cracken, Roy Privett, A. P. Powell. Automobile Radiator Company — Take-Apart Radiators. Bakeries — Gem Bakery, Henry Kabey, Zoellner Bakery, F. Kessler. Banks — Citizens' National, Greensburg National, Third National, Union Trust Company. Barber Shops — George O. Baumgartner, W. E. Golay. W. F. Martin, W. S. Meadows, J. F. Strausburger, James Andrews. (II) 1 62 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Bazaar Stores — The Fair. Morris I'^ive-and-Ten-Cent Store. Bicycles and Sundries — Albert Gilhani. L. N. Marlow. Bill Posters — Fred Seitz & Sons. Billiard Rooms — DeArmond Hotel, James Ford, Pierson Cigar Store. Blacksmiths — C. F. Brown, Brodie & Ricketts, S. E. Cline, Wade Coil, Hiram Collins, William Espy, Charles Ferris, Arthur Terrell. Boiler \\'orks — Joseph L. Luchte. Bottling Works — Michael O'Conner. Bowling Alley — Pierson Cigar Company. Brick Manufacturers — W. H. Isgrigg & Son. Buggies and Carriages — Haas & Son, Isaac Layton, George Mont- gomery. Building and Loan Associations — Greensburg- Building and Loan Asso- ciation, Workmen's Building and Loan Association. Buikling Material — Jones Lumber Company, Pulse & Porter, Strickland & Trester. Cab and Transfer Lines — Big Four Livery, Charles Beeson, Powell & Son. Carriage Painter — Edward Roberts. Cement and Drain Tile — Greensburg Commercial Club, Allen Brothers. Chiropractor — Dr. H. Dennis. Cigar Manufacturers — William Oliver, Harry Suttles, Erdman & Sons. Cigar Stores — John Ford, Pierson Cigar Company. Clothing — Carter & Company, Huber Clothing Company, Ironclad Clothing Company, J. M. Woodtill's Sons. Coal Dealers— D. M. Blackmure, Ewing & McKee, R. S. Meek & Sons, ClifYord Jones. Concrete Building Blocks — F. ^Y. ^Villey. Contractors — Allen Brothers, Barringer & Tuniilt}', Edward Dille,, James Duncan, W. H. Isgrigg & Son, Josejih Kelley, M. McCormack, Pulse & Porter, J. A. Roszell, Smith Brothers, Williams & Son. Dentists — Orlando Burns, F. C. Eddelman, A. E. Gilchrist, A. O. Hall, H. S. Hopkins, C. A. Kuhn. E. D. McLaughlin, R. J. Russell. Drugs — J. H. Batterton, Henry & Company, Magee's Pharmacy, Joseph S. Moss, St. John & Guthrie. Dry Goods — Dalmbert & Companv, The luitcrjirise, George W. Magee, Minear Dry Goods Company, W. W. Woodfill. Electric Company — Greensburg Electric and Gas Company. Express Companies — Adams, American. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. I63 Feed Dealers — D. M. Blackmore. Nading Elevator Company, J. M. Horniing & Son. Florists — Ira Clark & Company, W. C. Konzelman, R. Burtsch. Flour Mills — Garland Milling Company, Hornung Mills. _ Foundries — Greensburg Foundry and Machine Works. Funeral Directors — Kirby Bros., E. G. Schultz & Company. Eugene Rankin. Furniture Dealers — Woodward & Christian. E. A. Rankin, E. G. Schultz & Company, Styers & Son. Gas Companies — Citizens Gas and Supply Company, Greensburg Gas and Electric Company, Muddy Fork Gas Company, Sand Creek Gas and Oil Company. Groceries — Fred Wetzler, Bee Hive Cash Grocery Company, Crooks, D. A. Morris, Woods & Gray, A. L. Everhart, Golden Rule Store, Louis Huber, Linegar Brothers, James Littell, Samuel V. Littell, J. C. Marshall, New York Grocery, People's Grocery, Robert Huber, Sherman Doles, Lit- tell (S: Stewart, Sturges & Wilson, Max Penn, Norman Eubanks. Groceries (wholesale) — W. H. Robbins & Company. Hardware — Bonner, Hart & Ryan. Corbett & Rohe, Barnard, Garver & Shively. Hair Dresser — Mrs. James Eaton, Mrs. A. J. Kendall. Harness — J. Haas & Son, James H. Randall, Charles Woods. Hardwood Lumber — E. E. Doles, N. G. Swails, Frank Donnell. Horse Buyers — J. H. Christian. Hunter & Crews. Carl Swift. Hotels — Cottage, DeArmond, Espy House, Portland. Hides and Furs — Samuel Levenstein, Weaver & Company. Ice Cream and Confectionery — John Cosmas, Frank S. Kabey, Amer- ican Candy Kitchen, George Kessler. Ice Cream Manufacturer — Link & Kabey. Ice Manufacturers — Meek Ice Company. Insurance Agencies — Albert Morgan, Mrs. C. C. Lowe, A. Habig, A. L. Howard, Miller & Ryan, J. H. Parker, Charles Zoller, Patrons of Husbandly, ^lutual Fire and Lightning Insurance Company, Mendenhall & Grant. Jewelers — George W. Clemons. J. W. Owens, Philip H. Spohn, C. H. Thomson & Company, C. D. Tillson, C. B. James. Junk Dealers — Samuel Levenstein, W. H. Weaver & Company. Justices of the Peace — W. W. Dixon. C. E. Shields. Job Printing — Charles Childs, All City Papers. 164 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Livery Barns — Applegate & Parker, Big Four Livery and Feed Barn, J. F. Clemens, George S. Littell, Moss House Livery. Loans and Rentals — William Flemming, A. Habig, L. E. Laird, P. T. Lambert, Oscar G. Miller, J. H. Parker, G. M. Thompson, Charles Zoller, Frank Ford. Loans and Chattels — Capital Loan Company. Lumber Yards — Jones Lumber Company, Pulse & Porter. Machine Shops — Joseph L. Luchte, Greensburg Foundry and Machine Works. Meat Markets — Louis R. Bobrink, H. Kammerling. McCormick & Richey, Robert Huber. Millinery — Dalmbert & Company, Lena Littell, Anna Wheeldon, ]\Iary L. Hatfield, Minear Dry Goods Company. Monuments — South Park Monument Works. Musical Instruments — George Lanham, Christopher Link, J. W. Owens. Newspapers — Standard, Democrat, Nczvs, Review, Daily Times, Graphic. Optometrist — C. C. McCoy, Phillip H. Spohn. Osteopath — G. C. Flick. Physicians — P. C. Bentle, Charles Bird, F. P. Bitters, D. E. Douglass, C. B. Grover, T. B. Gullefer, C. F. Kercheval, C. C. Morrison, E. T. Riley, I. M. Sanders, R. M. Thomas, Paul R. Tinsdale, D. W. Weaver, B. S. White, James S. Woods, S. V. Wright. Planing Mills — Greensburg Planing Mills. Poultry Fanciers — C. J. Loyd, J. F. Strasburger, A. Goyert, C. Brown. Poultry Remedies — A. Lowe. Poultry Supplies — C. J. Loyd & Company. Produce Merchants — Goyert & Company. Restaurants — Benjamin Meyer, Michael O'Conner, Seitz, Garrett Sparks, J. P. Phillips, J. Turaschi. Second-Hand Dealers — Oscar Sparks, J. E. Mobley, J. W. Jackson. Shoe Repairers — John Doerflinger, George Tekulve, Michael McCor- mick. Shoe Dealers— Donnell & Son, Edkins & Son, L Carl Mitchell, Roy C. Kanouse, Styers & Son. Sign Painters — ^James Duncan, Blaine Ham, Morton Davis. Steam Laundry — Greensburg Sanitary Laundry. Stone Quarries — Greensburg Limestone Company. Telegraph Company — Western Union. Telephone Companies — Central Union, Decatur County. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 165 Transfer Companies — Greensburg Transfer Company. Tailors— Will C. Ehrhardt, J. D. Ford, W. C. Hann, D. R. Kerr, George J. Kratt, H. L. Wittenberg, Ware & Gassier. Upholstering — E. G. Schultz & Company, E. A. Rankin. Vacuum Cleaning — J- W. Parrish. A'eterinarians — C. B. Ainsworth, A. D. Galbraith, I. B. Levy, L. A. Wood. Wire Factory — Bromwell Brush and Wire Goods Company. THE DECATUR COUNTY INDEPENDENT TELEPHONE COMPANY. The first attempt in Decatur county to secure local telephone service was made in June, 1900, when two hundred leading citizens of Greensburg and farmers of the vicinity, at a mass meeting, organized the Decatur Tele- phone Company, and made provision for the sale of stock, erection of lines and the installation of a switchboard at Greensburg. Since its beginning, the concern has had its share of ups and downs, but now is in a very com- fortable financial condition, with more than two thousand subscribers. Stock was sold at twenty-five dollars a share and the company was capitalized at thirty thousand dollars. At the beginning, there were about one hundred subscribers. The first officers of the company were : S. L. Jackson, president: Morgan Miers, vice-president; Charles Zoller, Jr., sec- retary, and J. H. Christian, treasurer. These officers, with C. P. Miller, formed the board of directors. In 1902 the telephone companies at Westport and Letts Corners sold out to the organization, and by this deal three hundred additional subscribers were added to the Greensburg exchange. Some time later the Newpoint Telephone Company and the Alert Telephone Company arranged to lease the privilege of the Greensburg exchange and the one hundred patrons of these two companies are now served free. H. C. Stockman, then county treasurer, had the honor of introducing the first telephone used in Greensburg and Decatur county. In November, 1877, he opened a private line between his office, in the court house, and his grain elevator, six squares away on Monfort street. It was a great curiosity and many Greensburg residents heard their first "hello" over this line. The Greensburg switchboard is of the highest type now in use and is designed for both speed and secrecy. It is kno\v as the North automanual system and is a combination of the automatic and the old-style switchboard l66 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Only a few operators are needed at this board, and they are unable to hear conversations that take place on the various lines. Recently the company has been making an annual profit of eight per cent., which is given to stockholders in the form of reduced rates. Stock- holders are limited in voting to four shares and all business of the com- pany is transacted at an annual stockholders" meeting, which is always largely attended. There are now about one thousand stockholders. The present officers of the company are : C. P. jNIiller, president ; W. V. Pleak, vice- president: J. H. Christian, secretary' and treasurer, and F. S. Chapman, general manager. MILEAGE AND V.\LUATION. The total mileage and \alue per mile of all telegraph and telephone lines in Decatur count}- are as follow : Value Miles. per j\Iile. Western Union Telegraph Company 385 $55 American Telephone and Telegraph Company 391-2 75 Central Union Telephone Company 516.5 36 New Long Distance Telephone Company 40 46 Decatur County Telephone Company 1-659 23 Napoleon Telephone Company 7 10 Zenas Independent Telephone Company 12.5 20 THE GREENSBURG IMPROVEMENT ASSOCIATION. The Greensburg Impro\'ement Association had its birtli in 1S92, when the Baxter Carriage Company, of Cincinnati, hunting another location, sought to secure a manufacturing plant in Greensburg. There were a number of con- cerns manufacturing cheap buggies in the Queen City, and the town had fallen into disrepute from the carriage manufacturer's standpoint. A number of prominent citizens of Greensburg pledged themselves to provide the neces- sary funds to build a plant, and arrangements were made to move the plant here. Then some difficulties arose between the company and the Greensburg people, and the latter, for self-protection, incorporated the Greensburg Improvement Association. The first officers were Marshall Gruver, president; W. B. Hamilton, vice-president, and D. A. Myers, secretary. Other mem- bers of the board of directors were Louis E. Lathrop and Henrv Chrrstian. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 167 The difficulties were amicably adjusted and the association purchased one hundred and ten acres adjoining the city on the northwest, known as the Meek farm, which it split into town lots and sold, netting a profit of about thirty thousand dollars, which was applied to the erection of a suitable plant. The company operated for a few years, but could not breast the hard times of 1896, and went into a receivership. When its affairs were wound up, the plant was sold to the Lincoln Carriage Company, headed by W. B. and Edward Austead, of Conners\ille. This company operated the plant successfully until 1905, when it was wiped out by fire, the entire brick building being destroyed, with a loss of one hundred thousand dollars. The plant was ])artially rebuilt and a hay bailer company, organized to commercialize a new invention, was launched, but this concern was unsuc- cessful and the building is now occupied by the Kelly Manufacturing Com- pany. At least one growing concern had its inception and start in Greensburg. This was the Greensburg chair factory, which is now located at Anderson, Indiana. The company outgrew its space here and received an offer of a free factory site in Anderson. Local stockholders were bought out and the factory moved. It has grown to be one of the best manufacturing enter- prises of Anderson. The Greensburg Improvement Association now owns the Kelly plant and a number of lots which were parceled from the original plat and never sold. These plats contain five acres each and are suitable for improvement as suburban homes. GREENSBURG COMMERCIAL CLUB. Recognizing the fact that no city grows and accumulates wealth, save under wise direction and careful safeguarding of its interests by its own citi- zens, leading business and professional men of Greensburg took steps, in 1906, for the organization of a commercial body, which would afford these essentials for the future welfare of their municipality. The first meeting was held in the office of the mayor, March 5, 1906, when a committee was named to draw up plans for organization and draft a constitution and by-laws. This committee was composed of George E. Erd- mann, Harry Lathrop, Charles M. Woodfill, Dan S. Perry, C. D. Tillson, Oscar G. Miller and James E. Caskey. At a later meeting, the constitution prepared was adopted and Walter W. Bonner became the first president. 1 68 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Other officers elected were: Charles Zoller, Jr., \ice-presiclent ; Oscar }ililler, secretary, and Dan Perry, treasurer. The enteiprise \yas made a stockholding concern and six thousand and forty dollars was subscribed. A tract of land was bought and sold in town lots, netting the club a profit of three thousand, five hundred dollars, which was made the nucleus of a factory fund. A hay-bailer factor}' and a shoe factory were brought to Greensburg, but both discontinued operations after a short time. A large nunilier of factories which sought sites in Greens- burg were, after careful investigation, refused financial assistance, and many thousands of dollars thereliy saved local investors. Since its organization, the club has always maintained a \ery substantial balance. The latest report of the treasurer places the assets of the organiza- tion at four thousand, nine hundred and thirteen dollars. Most of it is invested in short-time securities, so that it can be made available at any time needed. When the automobile manufacturing" fever was at its height, and mush- room plants were springing up in all parts of the state, a company was organized in Greensl^urg for the manufacture of a six-cylinder car, to be called the Hamiltonian. The sum of fifty thousand dollars was raised and the company was incorporated. Some steps were taken toward opening a factory, and then the entire matter was dropped. Officers of this company were: W. W. Bonner, president; Harry Woodfill, vice-president: C. P. Cor- bett, secretary and treasurer, and Harry Hamilton and D. A. Myers, direc- tors. Although this company had the endorsement of the commercial club, it was in no sense an organization undertaking. New directors of the organization elected in 1913 were: Locke Bracken, John H. Batterton, C. C. McCoy and Ed. G. Schultz. The holdovers were John F. Russel, Roy C. Kanouse and James E. Caskey. John F. Russel served that year as chairman, C. C. McCoy was elected secretar}-, and Roy C. Kanouse was re-elected treasurer. Stockholders in the club authorized the directors to sell the Skeen building, which the organization owned, to George ^lontgomery. Mr. Mont- gomery had recently lost his place of business through fire. The building was sold to him at a price somewhat less than its estimated worth, as it is the desire of the organization to foster any enterprise which tends to build up the city. At a later meeting, that year, Edwards Doles applied to the board for a loan at less than the usual rate. His spoke and rim factory had been burned and he wished to rebuild. The Commercial club responded to his DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 1 69 request and loaned him several thousand dollars at very liberal rates and on very easy payments. In 1914, J. F. Russel, James E. Caskey, Roy C. Kanouse and E. G. Schultz. directors, whose terms expired that year, were re-elected. Georg E. Erd- mann was elected to membership on the directorate, taking the place made vacant by the removal of Locke Bracken. John H. Batterton was elected president, the other officers remaining unchanged. In 1914, the club pledged fifteen hundred dollars to secure the A. L. Lewis plant, located at Marion, Indiana, for Greensburg. The offer was accepted by the Marion company, which is now a permanent fixture, with bright prospects of becoming a large manufacturing plant. Old directors and ofTficers were re-elected in 191 5. Since its formation in 1906, the present Commercial Club has accom- plished a great deal for the city of Greensburg and the citizens thereof. The worth of a commercial club is not always to be measured by the number of manufacturing plants it secures for a city, but more often by its success in sifting out the good from the many fraudulent schemes offered to gain the public confidence. A commercial club is a guide post, or financial advisor to a city, to clear the way to safe investment, and the Greensburg Commercial Club has ever been on the alert, truly active in behalf of the best interests of the city. THE GREENSBURG BUSINESS MEN's ASSOCIATION. Co-operation is the watchword of modern business. Lawyers and phy- sicians, recognizing the value of mutual helpfulness, long ago, organized county, state and natioual organizations and used these bodies for the purpose of furthering their professional work through more efficient service. Fol- lowers of the other professions were not slow to fall in line. The retail merchant has, in almost e\'ery instance, been the last to avail himself of the advantages of co-operation. The keen competition of present- day business life has in a measure been responsible for this condition. \\'hile retailers realized that there was a great economic waste through purely inde- pendent business methods, for a long time they felt themselves powerless to change conditions. If John Smith, deadbeat, beat a hardware store out of a bill, the owner of the grocery, who had previousl\- lost through extending credit to Smith, laughed in his sleeve at the owner of the hardware store. It was amusing to learn that some other unfortunate had run counter to the bill-beating 170 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Smith. Tlie grocen-nian nursed his feehngs in secret for a time and then turned to laugh at the deadbeat's next victim. After a while. Smith made the rounds of all the places where credit was obtainable and then found but two courses open to him — either he must pay his bills as he contracted them or move out of town. Xow. the merchants of his town knew that he would not pa}' his bills, but thev luul paid high for their knowledge. This sort of thing went on for years. Perha]5s Smith left town, but others of his kind, under the same or other names, came in his place and the economic loss continued, a heavy drain not only upon the merchants, but also upon honest customers who were saddled with a goodly portion of the merchants' losses. At last, the retailers roused themselves. They were confronted with the knowledge that if credit was to be extended at all, in fairness to the man who paid cash, it must be extended wisely. Accordingly, various merchants arranged for exchange of confidential credit information. In a short time every merchant in town was attracted by the idea and an organization was perfected. Four times the business men of Greensburg ha\e attemjited such an organization and three failures ha\e resulted. They relied largely upon word-of-mouth information and transacted what little Inisiness they had through officials chosen from the standpoint of popularity rather than from any unusual ability in organization work of this nature. Consequently, each of these three organizations, started under most auspicious circumstances, worked energetically for a time, lost et¥icienc\-, lingered for a time and then passed out of existence so quietly that even the professional dead-beats scarcely knew the exact hour of their passing. The Greensburg Business Men's Association, the Greensburg merchants' fourth co-operative venture, was organized May 6, 1914. It differed from its predecessors in that it had a central olfice, with a paid secretary to do the work of the organization and look after details which had formerly been neglected by volunteer workers. The first officers of this organization, who still manage its affairs, were Samuel Bonner, president: George Parish, vice-president; D. A. Betterton, treasurer, ami Harry Lathrop, secretary. These officials are assisted in the management of organization matters by the following men, who, with them, comprise the directorate of the association : Clyde L. Meek, W. W. Bonner, Walter \V. Crisler, Lemuel Dobyns, Roy C. Kanouse, Mort Richey, E. G. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. I7I Shultz, Robert St. John, George Shoemaker, Charles Thomson, C. P. Corbett and \V. C. Pulse. Besides guarding its members against losses through unwise credit extensions, through its confidential exchange file, the association also [irotccts them against loss at the hands of promoters of \-alueless advertising schemes and itinerant peddlers. Memljers of the association agree to pay out no money to solicitors of any kind unless the}- ha\e received the sanction of a special committee. This committee is composed of three men. whose identity is unknown to the general membership and to one another. They report ujwjn each appli- cant to the president and if two api)r()vc bis project he receives the commit- tee's sanction before he begins his canvass. During the first year of its existence, this committee passed upon twenty proposed advertising schemes and declined to sanction all but four. The estimated saving to the merchants of Greensburg through protection from the unworthy sixteen was i)laced at four thousand dollars. Membership dues in the association were one dollar a month, and Greensburg merchants found its assistance so valuable that all but eight business men in tlie city had identified themselves with it before the end of its first year. At the end of its first year the organization had one hundred and ten members, ele\-en of whom lived in Adams, St. Paul, Letts, Sandusky, Newpoint and other parts of the count}'. As a result of this co-operati\'e venture, a better feeling grew among business men of Greensburg and the organization aimed at larger under- takings. Membership meetings are held each month and are well attended. During the summer a "Big \\'ednesday'' is held once a month and special entertainment features are offered to bring citizens of Decatur county to Greensburg. The association conducts an annual street fair, works for good roads, sanitary living conditions and is a twenty- four-hour-a-day booster for Greensburg and Decatur county. THE GREENSBURG CHAUTAUQUA. In the last decade, a large number of chautauqua programs have been offered in cities and towns through the Middle West. In some instances, the public has held aloof or, at best, taken but a mild interest in efforts made by puljlic-spirited citizens to bring the l)cst in music, in oratory and kindred arts to them at prices so low as to belie their real worth. In such locations, the Chautauqua was a failure from the start and was rarely repeated after the first attempt. 172 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. But in places where there is a genuine pulilic interest in matters of political importance, where there is a real appreciation of music, where people are alive to other things which make for sound knowledge and a more than veneered culture, the chautaucjua has taken deep root and is accomplishing results which can he obtained in no other manner. The success of the Greensburg Chautauqua Association, which offered its first program in 191 1 and has occupied the field ever since, speaks well for the citizenship of Greensburg and Decatur county. As was of necessity the case, the first chautauqua held in Greensburg was something of an experi- ment. Xo one knew whether the event would prove a splendid success or an ignominous failure, in order to make the e.xperiment, it was necessary that some one should guarantee the promoters against loss. The merchants of the city readily agreed to become guarantors of the undertaking and the first program was announced. It was so popular and so successful from every standpoint, that it was repeated the following year without first securing a list of guarantors and has been so conducted ever since. For business reasons, the association was incorporated in 19 14, under the laws of Indiana, as an organization to promote general culture, and not for profit. ]\Ianagement of the Greensburg chautauqua is vested in the board of directors of the association, together with James L. Loar and James Shaw, of Blooniington, Illinois, who were largely responsible for the introduction of the chautauqua in Decatur county. These men had been engaged in the business in Illinois for some time, but made their first attempt to conduct a program away from home in Greensburg. Although the association has, in several instances, made money from its programs, it has, in all cases, given its patrons the benefit, by spending it the following year upon better and more expensive numbers. Since the first year, all meetings have been held at ^Vest Academy. The program is given about the middle of August and usually lasts ten days. The following celebrities, among others, have spoken from a Greens- burg chautauqua platform : \\' illiam Jennings Bryan, Richmond P. Hobson, Senator Thomas P. Gore, George W. Bain and Bishops Ouayle, Hughes and McDowell. Innes' and Vatales' bands have given concerts and some high- class dramatic talent has added variety to the programs. Officers and directors of the association are: J. W. Craig, president; Dr. C. R. Bird, vice-president ; G. G. ^^'elsh. treasurer ; Will Ehrhardt, secre- tary ; Dr. P. C. Bentle, E. C. Jerman, Judge Hugh Wickens, R. C. Kanouse. Bert Morgan, Mrs. J. F. Goddard. Mrs. Alex. Porter and Miss Edith Patten. ]Mr. Ehrhardt is platform manager. Although the chautaucpia grounds are DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 1 73 not exceptionally attractive as a camping place, a considerable number of patrons camp there each season. THE ASSOCIATED CHARITIES OF GREENSBURG. The Associated Charities of Greensburg was organized in response to a definitely-felt need in November, 1906, and has been in active operation since 1907. Charities, public and private, had, of course, existed in the city previous to this date, but the board of directors, recognizing the necessitv of placing the matter of relief upon the most sensible and most practicable working basis by bringing into co-operation all charitable agencies, so that they should not duplicate each other's work, such as keeping of records, friendly visiting among the poor and the organization of charitable effort so that it might be directed more effectively. Their first endeavor was to obtain a general secretary, who slmuld organize and push forward the work. They were very fortunate in securing the services of Mrs. Emma Sefton, who, for five years, discharged the duties with exceptional intelligence and devotion. Besides the general secretary, the chief agency of the work is the board of nine directors, representati\'e men and women, who gi\'e their services gratuitously and have no other object in view than the proper care of the unfortunate. Monthly meetings are held and the general operation and policy of the association are under their direction. Four of the members of the board, Mrs. F. P. Montfort, \-ice-president ; C. \V. Woodward, treas- urer ; ^Margaret Drake, secretary, and Harry Lathrop, have served continu- ously since the organization of the society. George Erdmann, president ; John F. Russel, I. Carl ]\litchell, Mrs. Emma Hamilton and Robert St. John have since been elected directors. Mrs. Carrie F. Meek, the present general secretary, has served in this capacity for almost three years and has, with a singleness of purpose, endeavored to increase the scope and usefulness of the society. Its methods have been worked out slowly by careful experi- ment. Many of its cherished ideals are as yet unrealized, but each )-ear some new things are accomplished that had before been unattainable. The Girls' Cooking School, the fifth session of which is now being held, is one of the most helpful and practical departments of the association's work. The thirty girls enrolled are taught to cook, wash dishes, set the table and to serve. The excellent quality of the food prepared by them and the neatness and skill displayed attest how effectively instruction is given. The linen loan department, maintained by the Woman's Christian Temperance Union, contains almost exervthing needed in a sick room and has carried 174 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. comfort and cheer into nian_\' homes. .\n employment l^ureau is maintained, at which a registration is made of 1joth emi)lu}crs and men seeking work. This department has done some excellent work in relieving distressing situations by helping the heads of families to find employment. Each year a number of vacant lots are given out for gardening purposes to families that need them. Complete records of over four hundred cases of persons applying for assist- ance are on file in the office of the association. These are not for public inspection, but are kept in order and up to date, that intelligent aid may be rendered. POSTOFFICE HISTORY. After the incorporation of the town of Greensburg, the following letter was drafted, asking that a postoflice be established there: "Greensburg, Indiana, SeptemJjer ii, 1822, "Hon. Return J. Meigs, Postmaster General of United States: "The undersigned respectfully represent that a postoffice is much wanted at Greensburg, Indiana. This place is selected as the seat of justice for the county of Decatur, established and organized at the last session of the Legis- lature of this state : it is situated on the waters of Sand creek, forty-four miles southeastward of Indianapolis, and on the mail route leading from Lawrenceburg by way of Napoleon, to that place. "The\' recommend for the appointment of postmaster and request that the office papers may be directed to Madison, from which place they can be speedil}- transmitted to this. They further request that the mail route aforesaid Ije put into immediate operation."' From the fact that no names are attached and no one is recommended for the office of postmaster, it is to be inferred that this was probably the first draft of the petition. The first postol'fice in Cireensburg \\-as estalilished when the town was first laid out and Thomas Hendricks was the first postmaster. The ne.xt was Andrew Davison, Democrat, appointed by Andrew Jackson in 1829, who served until ^Villiam Henry Harrison took office. Then, in 1841, Davison resigned, whether of his own volition or by request, is not known. His successor was Silas Stewart. The Greensburg Repository for May, 1841, says: "Barton M. Harney, Esq., has been appointed postmaster at this place, in the place of Silas Stew- art, resigned. We believe this appointment will give universal satisfaction. Bart is an uncompromising Locofoco, an honest man, a good tailor, a clever DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 1 75 fellow, and we doubt luit that he will make an accommodating and efficient postmaster." Harney did make a good postmaster — for one day. When he received his commission, he removed the postoffice sign and the few mail pouches to his tailoring establishment, .\fter conducting the office for one day he con- cluded that |)atrons of the office were damaging his stock. That same night he moved the "ofiice" liack to its old location and appointed John Stewart, a drug clerk, deputy postmaster. John B. Covington, a Democratic editor, w'as appointed postmaster in 1854, and had the office on the north side of the square. Later, he sold his newspaper to William Van Horn, and the postmastership was transferred with it. The ne.xt postmaster was John Watson, during whose term the office was located near the railroad. During the war the postmaster was John J. Hazelrigg. He was fol- lowed by James King. While King was postmaster the office was in the basement of the I'resbyterian church. George Id. Dunn, his succes.sor, held the oflice for the longest period in its history. He was appointed by Presi- dent Grant in 1869 and served until 1886. His deputies were Sam McGuire and George Dunn, Jr. Henry E. I'.lack ser\'ed as postmaster from 1886 until 1890. His deputy w'as Miss Ida Black. The office was then located on South h^ranklin street. Thomas Hendricks was appointed to the office in 1890 and Stephen Rogers in 1894. The ne.xt postmaster was James E. Caskey, during whose administration both urban and rural free delivery was established, and the business of the office correspondingly increased. While Caskey was postmaster, the safe was blown open and a small amount of money and stamps alistracted. A. M. Willoughby, editor of the Grccusbury Rez'ic7v, was appointed postmaster in 1902, and served four years. He was followed in 1906 by L. D. Braden, editor of the Grccnsbtirg Standard. Mr. Braden made way, in 1910, for Bert Morgan, who ser\-ed until 19T4, when the present incumljcnt, George E. Erdmann, was appointed by President \\'ilson. There are now thirteen rural routes radiating from the Greensburg office, supplying Decatur county farmers with daily papers and placing them in close touch with the city by means of the parcel post, which has shown a wonderful development during the past year. Including messenger boys, twent\-five persons in all are now emijloyed at the Greensburg office. No county in the state surpasses Decatur for completeness of service, it is said. Patrons of the rural mutes leading from Greensburg are peculiarly 176 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. fortunate in tlieir service, as they, in most instances, receive their mail in the forenoon. Carriers get awav from the otiice and sometimes have their routes half covered, when carriers from other oflices are still waiting for the morning mail train to arrive. The chief rural free delivery center of the county is Greensburg, which has thirteen mutes leading from it. In addition, it supplies postofhces at ]\Iillhousen. Clifty and Clarksburg. Rural routes are also operated from the Letts Corner, Westport, Newpoint, St. Paul and Burney postoffices. PUBLIC LIBRARY. The inception of the Greensburg public lilirary dates from the latter part of 1901, when A. Al. Willoughby, then mayor of Greensburg, opened correspondence with Andrew Carnegie regarding a donation for a library in this city. Correspondence was continued with ^Nlr. Carnegie, which resulted in liis making a proposition to furnish fifteen thousand dollars for the erec- tion of a building, providing the city would furnish a suitable site and agree to support the library. In May, 1902, a vote was taken at the regular city election on the question of taxing the city for the support of the library and the resulting vote was practically unanimous in fa\or of the imposition of the tax. On August i, 1902, the city council accepted Mr. Carnegie's gift formally and passed resolutions authorizing the le\'ying of the library tax. The next cpiestion was the location of the proposed building. The council advertised for property suitable for a library site and, after consider- ing several locations, the site of the W. A. \\''atson foundry, on North Michigan a\-enue, was chosen. The council paid six thousand dollars for the lot, Mr. Watson donating one thousand to the city, which, with a donation of eighteen hundred dollars by citizens, reduced the amount paid by the city to thirty-two hundred dollars. In Octoljer, 1902, a li]>rary Ijoard of seven members was appointed, as follows : By the judge of the Decatur circuit court, Hon. Will Cumback, Hugh D. Wickens and Mrs. Ida L. Ewing; by the common council, Mollie Zoller and Thomas E. Davidson ; by the school board, Mrs. Anna C. Grover and ]\I. D. Tackett. The board met at the house of Mrs. Grover on October 24 and organized by electing the following officers : Will Cumback, presi- dent; Hugh D. Wickens, vice-president; Mollie Zoller, secretary: Thomas E. Davidson, treasurer. Several architects submitted plans for a building and, after careful consideration, the firm of Harris & Shopbell were employed to DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 1 77 furnish the plans and specifications. On April i6, 1909, Pulse & Porter, of Greensburg, were awarded the contract for the construction of the building, the contract calling for $10,725. This did not include the heating plant, which was awarded to Watson Sons, of Terre ffaute, for $741.63, and the wiring and plumbing to Watson & Company, of Greensburg, for $450. This brought the total cost of the building up to $11,916.63, of which amount the architects were to receive four per cent. The remainder of the fifteen-thou- sand-dollar donation of Mr. Carnegie was applied to the furnishing and in- terior decoration of the Iniilding. The cornerstone was laid on August 21, 1903, and on Januar\- 24, 1905, the library board formally tendered the com- pleted building to the citizens of Greensburg. On the following day the library was opened for the circulation of books and during the decade wliich has elapsed since that time the library has continually increased in usefulness to the community. The present liljrary Ijoard is composed of the following: Sanuiel Bon- ner, president; Mrs. Kate Minear, \'ice-president ; Mrs. Ida L. Ewing, secre- tary; Mrs. Will Pulse, Charles H. Ewing and Oscar G. ^Miller. Bessie Montfort was the first librarian and served in this capacity until her death, on Septeiuljer 17, 1905. Her father, Frank P. Montfort, was then elected librarian, and still continues in that capacit_y. The library now has a total of eight thousand volumes on the shelves and a wide varietv of standard magazines. The records show that in June, 1915, about eleven hundred persons were taking advantage of th.e library. THE YOUNG ME.N's CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION. In 19 1 5 there was completed in Greensburg what is probably the finest Y. M. C. A. building in the United States for a citv of its size. Certainly there is no building in Indiana which approaches it in completeness. Another distinctive feature of this building is the fact that it is the gift of one man, and he not only gave the money for the site, the building and its equipment, but also an endowment fund for its perpetual maintenance. As far as is known, no other Young Men's Christian Association building in the world has been established under such conditions. Nelson Mowrey is responsible lor this magnificent building, which will stand as a tribute to his philanthrophy for many generations yet to come. .\.s a youth, ]\Tr. Mowrey was deprived of educational advantages and it has been his desire for se\-eral years to do something for the city of Greensburg (12) lyS DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. which would lielp the bij^'s and young men of the town to improve their opportunities. It was not until, after careful investigation and long confer- ences with intimate friends, that he decided to build and endow a Young Men's Christian Association building for his native city. On July 30. 1914, ]\[r. Mowrey made a donati(5n of sixty thousand dol- lars for the purchase of a site and the erection and equipment of a Young Men's Christiaii Association building. But his beneficence did not stop here. Realizing the difficulty which a city of this size would ha\e in maintaining a building of this size, he provided for a permanent endowment fund of forty thousand dollars, which was to be kept intact, only the interest to be used for maintenance. Since making this original gift of one hundred thousand dollars, Mr. Mowrey has made an additional donation of twelve thousand five hundred dollars in order that the building and grounds might have certain desirable improvements. When Mr. Mowrey made his original donation he provided for a board of ten representative citizens of Greensburg (he being one of the number), and this board became the incorporators of the Young Men's- Christian Association. These incorporators included himself and nine other citizens of the city, as follows : Dr. C. C. Morrison, D. A. Myers, E. C. Jerman, Robert Naegel, C. P. Corbett, George P. Shoemaker, Frank Bennet, R. C. Kanouse and Henry Hodges. Furthermore, Mr. Mowrey designated the first seven of these men as a board of directors. The directors at once organized, with the following officers : Frank Bennet, president ; D. A. Meyers, vice-president ; E. C. Jerman, secretary. Mr. Bennet resigned in November, 1914, to move to California, and Dr. C. C. ^lorrison was elected president to fill the vacancy. In order to keep the number of incorporators up to the local requirement, ^^'. ^^'. Bonner was selected to fill the vacancy created I)y the resignation of Mr. Bennet. The board of trustees consists of D. A. Meyers, R. C. Kanouse and Flenry Hodges. As soon as the two boards were organized, steps were taken at once to select a site, to plan tlie Ijuilding and equip it in such a way as to make it as good as any in the country. Many sites were suggested before the present location on North Broadway, a half block from the public square, was finally selected. This site, purchased from Doctors Kercheval and White, has a frontage of one hundred and twenty and a depth of one himdred and sixty feet. Several architects submitted plans, but those of Shattuck & Hussey, of Chicago, were finally selected. The contract for the building was let on February 15, 1915, to W. H. Isgigg & Son, of Greensburg, the same to be completed by the 15th of the following October. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 1 79 The main Iniikling is seventy by one hundred feet, with annex extending thirt\-se\en feet in the rear. It has a basement and two stories, with a total of thirty-eight rooms. The style of architecture is known as early English and the architects have succeeded in designing a building which combines beauty and utility. The basement has three educational rooms, separated by accordion doors so that the rooms can be thrown together for banquet purposes. Two hun- dred people can easily be seated in the three rooms. A kitchen, completely equipped, adjoins these three rooms. It was the desire of Mr. Mowrey that the girls and women of the city might have accommodations in the building, and for this reason a ladies' rest room, cloak, locker and toilet rooms are provided in the basement for their use. An outside entrance is provided for the ladies. Furthermore, the basement is so arranged that they have access to the swimming pool and it is the intention to set aside certain days in each week when the girls and women may have the use of the pool. On the oppo- site side of the basement from the ladies' quarters, are found the lockers and toilet rooms for the boys and men. The distinctive feature of the basement is the swimming pool, which is twenty by sixty feet, with maximum depth of nine feet. The pool itself, as well as the room in which it is placed, is floored with tile and a wainscoting of the same material extends around the room. The pool extends back into the annex of thirty-seven feet, which has been pre\'iousl_\' mentioned, the whole of the annex being roofed by a sky- ligh.t. The rest of the basement is taken up with the heating plant and coal room. It should be mentioned in this connection that it was thought desirable to have additional coal space and ]\Ir. Mowrey very generously provided for an outside underground bin, adjoining the l)oiler room, which has a capacity of two car loads. The basement, as originally planned, had a cement floor, but, at the suggestion of the board of directors, Mr. Mowrey made an addi- tional donation for a terazzo floor. This flooring is used in all the base- ment except the pool room, which is of tile, and the boiler and coal rooms, which are of cement. The first floor is reached by marble steps from the front of the building. The vestibule has two doors, the right door opening into the men's side and the left door into the boys' department. Between the two doors, facing the outside door, is a magnificent bronze plaque of Mr. Mowrey in bas-relief. The rooms set aside for the men are provided with books and magazines and wholesome games of various kinds. The reading room faces the front and is a large, airy room, with beautiful appointments. The boys' rooms, on the left, correspond in a general way to those of their elders on the right. The l8o DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. secretary's office is placed in such a manner that lie can oversee not only the rooms of the men and boys, but also the gymnasium, which occupies the rear of the first and second stories. The gymnasium extends the full height of the first two stories and is surrounded with a gallery. In this room are found all the latest jjhysical appliances, while the room is arnpl}- large enough for basket ball, hand hall and various other kinds of indoor sports. A cork running track is also provided. The office of the physical director adjoins the gymnasium. The second floor contains seventeen dormitories, which are to be rented to members of the association. This floor is provided with shower baths and toilet rooms. As has been said, the gymnasium extends through the first and second floors. The liuilding is heated with Imt \\ater and lighted by electricity. Noth- ing but the best of material was used in its construction and the board of directors have taken pride in making this building the equal, to say the least, of anv building of its kind in the country. The grounds are surrounded with a nine-inch coping, which adds not a little to the general attractiveness of the building itself. A croquet ground is provided in the southwest corner of the grounds and a tennis court in the northwest corner. It was an after- thought of Mr. !Mowrey to pro\-ide f(jr the paving of the alleys, which are on the side and rear of the grounds. Such, in brief, is a description of one of the nnjst unique buildings which has ever been erected in the United States. Mr. Mowrey has taken an active interest in the building frimi the start and the board of directors have found in him a sympathetic assistant in their labors. To Dr. C. C. jNIorrison, as president of the board, should be given a large amount of credit. As the closest personal friend of I\Ir. Mowrey, he has tried to carry out his wishes in a faithful and conscientious manner and Mr. Mowrev is free to ack- nowledge the indebtedness which he owes to Doctor ?iIorrison. The other members of the Ijoard have labored no less zealously to make this building what it is and the city of Greensburg owes a debt of gratitude, not only to the donor of this magnificent building, but to the men whom ^Ir. Mowrey chose to take general management of his gift. It is to be hoped that the boys and young men of Greensburg will properly appreciate this building and that it will mean a better citizenship and a better city. MUNICIPAL FINANCIAL STATEMENT. The finances of the city are in the hands of the clerk, who, at the end of each vear, issues an annual statement showing the financial condition of the DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. jgl city. The city clerk, Cortez Patton, furnished the following financial state- ment for the year ending December 31, 1914: LIABILITIES. I 00.00 Schools bonds, issued August 15. 1899 ^22. Refunding bonds issued December 30, 1909 20,000.00 School site bonds, issued June i, 1912 6,500.00 Miscellaneous 439.00 Total $49,439.00 Assets $60,705.00 60,705.00 E.xcess of assets over lialiilities $11,266.00 RECEIPTS. Regular receipts $35,347.00 Special improvement assessment 3,342.00 38,889.00 EXPENDITURES. Regular $39,731.00 Carnegie Library Board 2,419.00 Interest and principal on bonds 3,236.00 44,386.00 Deficit for year 5,497.00 CITY OFFICERS. The present officers of the city of Greensburg are as follow : Mayor, James E. Alendenhall : ckrk, Cortez Patton; council, Wesley Lanius (first ward), Harry Mount (second ward), Marion Allen( third wartl), Thomas Tumilty (fourth ward), and two-at-large, Frank Magee and I. B. Levy; chief of police, \V. L Johnston; chief of the fire department, Joseph Kelley; health officer. Dr. B. S. White. The churches, schools, lodges, newspapers, banks, building associations, railroads and industries of Greensburg are referred to in separate chapters. CHAPTER VIl. EDUCATION. The educational history of Decatur county fahs into two divisons, the period from the organization of the county, until 1853, when the present system of public schools was adopted, and from that date to the present. Free schools w'ere provided for by the Constitution of 185 1, but it was not until two years later that they went into operation. From 1822 until 1853 there was not a single free school in Indiana, for even the old academies were supported, in part, by tuition. All education was obtained in what were known as subscription schools, parents paying the teacher so much a term for each pupil they sent to school. Teachers were not examined and taught only the rudiments of reading, writing and arithmetic. The three R's formed the basis of all work in the school room, although in the more pretentious institutions geography and history were taught. EARLY RURAL SCHOOLS. The usual school term in Decatur county during the early days was three months, and the school day began early in the morning and lasted until sundown. The teacher would be at his desk at sunrise and the iirst pupil to arrive at the school house would be the first to recite. This privilege of reciting first was much sought by those more eager for knowledge and there was usually keen competition among the star pupils, and consequent early rising. There were a few drones, however, who cared little whether school kept or not. and therefore, as if to show their contempt for learning, would come straggling in about ten o'clock, or in plenty of time for the noon recess. Early schools were held in vacant log cabins, chinked with mud, pro- vided with puncheon seats and oiled-paper windows. Text books were the American Primer, Dilworth's and Webster's spelling book, Guthrie's or Pike's arithmetics, the English Reader, the Bible and, sometimes, Weem's "Life of Washington." This last book was a novel, but won a place in the list of text books because of the excellence of the moral carried by the cherry tree story. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 183 School houses were not provided with bells in those days and when llie teacher wished to call his pupils from play, he would step outside, pound upon the side of the school building with a stick and shout, "Books! Books!" at the top of his voice. Pupils studied "out loud." and the resultant bedlam was audil)le for some distance from the building. The experienced teacher could tell in an instant when some youth wavered in, his pursuit of learning or sought to engage in con\'ersation, at the expense of his lessons. Sometime near 1840 Miss Jane Bartee taught a school in the southern part of the county. She must have possessed an ear for both rhyme and r\-thm, for she gave her school rules a metrical embodiment. The follow- ing classical fragment is still e.xtant : "No rippin', no tearin'. No cussin", no swearin', No clingin', no swingin', to trees." The father of this poetical school ma'am was a justice of the peace, and, by virtue of that office, a member of the county board, which performed the duties of the present-day county commissioners. When the board met in Greensburg, j\Ir. Bartee would walk thither, barefooted and garbed in undyed homespun, and, thus attired, enter upon his official duties with all due dignity. Teachers were expected to treat their pupils at Christmas. Whisky and sugar were common delicacies for teachers to serve to boys and girls at this glad season. Sometimes a teacher, with more than ordinary moral and physical courage, bra\ed public opinion and declined to treat on this occasion. Often it went hard with him. A Mr. East, teaching in Marion township, once declined to follow precedent in this respect. He was seized bv the larger boys and hustled most ingloriously toward a nearby pond. He yielded to the inevitable just in time to escape a ducking. Singing was a common method used by teachers in inculcating fami- liarity with multiplication tables and geographical facts. The pupils sang their tables through, from the "twos" to the "twelves," forward and back- ward, and then, with what spirit they had left, swept into the strains of the geography song, the first line of which went something like this : "Maine, Maine, Augusta, on the Kennebec river; Maine, Maine, Augusta, on the Kennebec river." Some of the early teachers who had charge of schools in Decatur county during the twenty years following its organization were : J- H. 184 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. I'lankin and William Marlow, Springhill ; John Goddard, Clinton township ; "Uncle Jack" Bell and John Hopkins, Mt. Carniel ; Sam Donnell, Samuel Henry, James McCoy, "William Thomson, Kingston; Tom Peery, Elijah Mitchell. Enoch l^ackett. J. S. Guant and (iarrard Morgan, near Greensburg. and Joe I'atton, Samuel Sebaugh and James Brockmare. in Greensburg. QUALIFICATIONS OF TEACHER.S. In the early days, not much preparation was recpiired in order to "teach scho(jl.'" The i)edagogue looking for a school for the winter, with an opportunity to "board round" and so eke out his scanty earnings, went to the township trustees, applied for a place, and if they liked his appearance he was hired without much of an examination into his qualifications. In most cases, the trustees themselves were men with very little education and would not presume to question the aliility of anyone seeking a position as teacher. ^^'hen examinations were given, they were usually oral and, in most cases, delightful farces. In the early days, so the story goes, a young woman applied to Doctor Moody for a license to teach. Doctor bloody was a mem- ber of the board of county examiners. He asked her a few questions and then gave her the following certificate : "This certifies that Miss can read a little and write a little." In 1S35 Dr. S. H. Riley, then a young man, wanted a license to teach and presented himself at the drug store of County Examiner Da\-iess Batter- ton, in Greensburg. Mr. Batterton wrote down a question upon a slate and Riley, seated upon a box, would write the answer u]ion paper. Aleanwhile Mr. Batterton would wait upon a customer or two and then write down another question. When the examination was completed, Batterton wrote out a teacher's license for Riley. Residents of Springhill called a meeting on July 2, 1843, for considera- tion of methods for improving the common school system. George Ander- son presided and E. Mitchell acted as secretary. The following organiza- tion was effected: Adams Rankin, president; William Anderson, secretary; ^A'. M. Herrick, Rev. James Worth and John Bell, directors. Rev. Hugh Maime and P. Hamilton were re(|uested to address the meeting at a future date. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 185 THE DECATUR COUNTY SEMINARY. In 181 8 the Legislature passed a law providing for a trustee for each county, whose duty it should be to accumulate and invest funds arising from exemption money and fines, for the estalslishment of a secondary school in each county, to receive pupils from township schools and fit them for the .State University. This law was superseded in 1824 Ijy an act providing for county seminaries. The Greensburg seminary was authorized by an act of the Legislature on January 20, 1832. In 1833, eleven years after its organization, Decatur county availed itself of this law. A sufficient sum had been raised from sources mentioned to build a seminar}-. The location selected was the corner of Franklin and McKee streets, one S(|uare from the railroad. Contract for its erection was awarded to Jacob Stewart, who completed the building in 1834, at a cost of two thousand dollars. Stewart had formerly been a land surveyor under Colonel Hendricks. The first trustees of the institution were: James Freeman, James Elder, Abraham Garrison, Benjamin Jones, Morton .\tkins, David Montague, Da\'id Johnson and Samuel Donnell. The old building, which is still standing, is a large, square, two-story brick structure, surmounted by a brick cupola. The grounds about the institution covered an entire block, giving the few pupils a considerable amount of territory over which to romp and play. The seminary was opened in September, 1834, but, like other institutions of this character in the state, it relied entirely upon tuition fees to pay teachers and meet other expenses. The day of free schools was still far distant. James G. May was the first instructor. He had been employed as assistant teacher for a time at Salem and was well (|ualified to take charge of the institution. He was assisted by his wife and sister and Elias Riggs, a Princeton man and uncle of Riggs Forsyth, at one time head of the old First National Bank. The first pupils were Orviile Thoni|>son, Oriegon Thompson, Camilla Thompson and James B. Lathrop. May was succeeded, in 1840, by .\bram T. Hendricks, a graduate of Hanover College, who taught for one year and then (|uit to enter the ministry. While he was in charge of the seminary he had the valuable assistance of his younger brother, Thomas A. Hendricks, who later became \-ice-president of the United States. Dr. J. B. Lathrop, who was one of the first students at the old seminary, remembers yir. Hendricks verv well, as he and the man who later liecame l86 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. go\-ernor of Indiana and then \ice-president, read \'irgil together in the old building. Tiie last time Mr. Lathrop met the cH.^tinguished man, 'Mr. Hend- ricks told him that, while he didn't know whether or not he had accomplished much good in the world, he did know that he had many pleasant recollections of days spent at the old seminary. Speaking of Air. }ila_y, the first instructor, Mr. Lathrop says: "He was assisted by his sister, Miss Elizabeth Alay. I can say for him that, while he licked them every day, the boys who went to school to him have a profound reverence for his memory. T remember that he was very anxious to organize a Latin class. I was nine years old and was one of its first members. i\Ir. May taught later in Salem and New Albany. He taught until he was eighty- two years old. When he became so old that he was no longer wanted in town, he went out into the country to teach." The next superintendent of the seminary was Philander Hamilton, a product of the institution which was placed in his charge in 1841. \Mien but a small lioy, he met with an accident and was badly crippled. He first studied in the seminar}- under James May and later graduated from Hanover College. He managed the institution for one year and then retired to edit the Grecnshtirg Sentinel. Hamilton turned a year later to the study of law and died after practicing a few years. He served one term in the Legislature. Francis P. Monfort, graduate of Oxford College, and later a Presby- terian minister, followed Hamilton. He is said to have possessed marked ability as a poet. IMonfort was assisted by Agnes Neal until 1844, when he was succeeded by Dr. Andrew M. Hunt, later founder of Sioux City, Iowa. Davies Batterton, an Indiana University man, was the last head of the seminary. He took charge of the institution in 1847. ^''' 185- the new state constitution abolished the seminary system, the building was sold and the money applied to the school fund. As Greensburg was not incorporated until 1 831), the l)uiUling was rented and maintained by pri\ate enterprise as a grammar school. Among students at the seminary who achieved success in later life were: Thomas A. Hendricks, United States senator and vice-president of the United States; Dewitt C. Rich, who represented Jennings count}- in the Legislature: John F. Ewing, who became a successful lawyer at Burlii-igton, Iowa; James N. Sander, noted Presbyterian minister ; Or\-ille Thompson, printer, soldier and writer, and James B. Lathrop, minister and banker. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. PRIVATE SCHOOLS. About 1840 Benjamin Nyce and his sister Elizabeth conducted a school in a small building on the site of the present county jail. Miss Nyce taught the smaller children and her brother the larger ones. Eight years later a- subscription schoul was started on Jackson street by Miss Martha Ann Gageby. Dennis Coakley, an Irishman, had a school during the spring of 1849 on North Eranklin street. Another school was opened in the base- ment of the Presbyterian church in 1850 by Rev. David Monfort and Miss Mary Carter. In 185 1 Mrs. Luther taught a subscription school in a little one-room frame house on West Washington street. Later, private schools were, started for those who wished to secure a higher educaticm than they ciiuld obtain in the pul.)lic schools. Miss Abbie Snell, a New Englander, taught a class of twenty regular high-school sub- jects in the rear of the present Greensburg National Bank Iniilding. Associ- ated with this school was one taught by Miss Hood, later Mrs. James Bonner. Miss Snell later married Judge Bonner. Miss' Hood, with the assistance of Belle Carroll, conducted a school in the basement of the old Presbyterian church. It was organized in 1869 and continued until 1875. FIR.ST FREE SCHOOL. The first free school in Greensburg was opened on July 20, 1857, with four teachers: Mrs. INIcCollough, Miss Eunice I'aul, B. F. West and I. G. Grover. Text books used were : McGuffey's readers, Ray's arithmetic, Pineo's grammar, Goodrich's history. Bullion's languages, Comstock's philos- ophy and chemistry, and Davies's legends. The higher branches were taught by Mr. Grover. The first school trustees under the new system were W. \\'. Lowe, A. I. Hobbs and B. H. Harney. The primary department, taught by Mrs. McCollough. was located in the basement of the Baptist church ; the next grade, taught by Miss Paul, met in the basement of the Presbyterian church, and the other {\\o teachers held forth in the seminary. GRADED SCHOOLS. The first graded school in Greensburg was in 1861. It was conducted in the basement of the old Baptist church. Miss Drucilla Warthin was prin- cipal and Miss Rebecca Richmond, assistant. The school was free for town pupils, but those coming from the country were charged six dollars for the l88 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. three-months tenn. The curricuhini eniljraced pliilosopliy, algebra and ancient history, in addition to the common school branches of learning. Upon the organization of this graded school, Doctor Moody, A. R. Forsyth and J. B. Lathrop were named trustees. There was only sufficient .money to run the school for a term, with no allowances for incidentals. Money was raised to hire a janitor by assessing each pupil fifty cents. It was during this term that Doctor Moody displayed true Solomonic wisdom in settling a rather delicate matter. One of the patrons of the school came to him and protested because a little negro girl was attending the school. He said he w(-iu!d take his own daughter out unless the colored pupil was removed. The colored girl was very light in color, while the pro- testing citizen's daughter was a very dark krunette. "Very well," said Doc- tor Moody. "We will send a man around tomorrow to pick out the negro. If he picks nut the negro, she goes out, and if he picks nut your child, she goes out." The irate citizen was content to drop the matter. B}' the school law of 1853, civil township trustees were authorized to establish a sufficient number of public schools to care for the education of all white children. Xegroes and mulattoes were not to Ije admitted ; neither could they be taxed for school purposes. The following old petition, presented by Greensburg colored people to the school board, is preserved in the public library: "We. the colored people of the city of Greensburg, respectfully ask you that our children be admitted to all the rights and pri\ileges of the public schools. \\'e beg to say that we make this recpiest for the reason that there are not sufficient colored chil- dren in the city to justify the organization of a separate school for them.'' The petition was signed Ijy J. \V. Therman, Richard Lewis, Mitchel Tracy, W. B. Scott, S. Crewett, ^V. Sanders, John Morgan and George W. Lee. Richard Lewis was the father of a subsecpient graduate of the Greensburg high school who became professor of mathematics at Hampton Institute. In 1870 a separate school for colored children was operated for a time in rooms over the First National Bank, with a Miss .\nderson as instructor. The project was abandoned after a short trial. teachers' gatherings. The first recorded gathering of Decatur county pedagogues took place in Greensburg in 1857. Two teachers in Sand Creek township, Kidd and Chaffin by name, had been raising a consideraljle amount of rhetorical dust in arguments on corporal punishment. Debates had been held in various DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 189 parts of the townsliip, and they arranged to condnct a debate in Greensljnrg, in order that teachers from all parts of the county might be present. Fifteen teachers assembled in Harney's hall to hear the two worthies present their arguments. But, before either of them could take the floor and open the meeting, W. H. Powner arose and. after pointing out the futil- ity of such a discussion, proposed that an organization be effected for iniprovement of methods of instruction. The suggestion was followed and Davies Batterton was elected president and J- A. Dillman, secretary. Neither of the authorities u])on corporal punishment was gi\-en an o])portunity to loose their floopointed to com- plete the unexpired term. Mr. Carr then held the office for a tenu of two years. J. H. Boljl)itt was elected in 1881 and served for three terms, or 192 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. until 1887. He was again a candidate for the office in this year, hut was defeated liy John W. Jenkins in a close contest. Eighty-six ballots were taken Ijy the township trustees hefore either candidate secured a majority of the votes. County superintendents elected since that time have heen : L. D. Bra- den, 1889; John W. Jenkins, 1S91 ; E. C. Jerman, 1897; Edgar Mendenhall. 1903, and Frank C. Fields. 191 1. The school enumeration for Decatur count)' for 187J, as taken by Su])erintendent W. H. Powner, was seven thousand and fifty-eight. The number of sch()ol children in the county, according to the latest enumera- tion is fi\'e thousand ninet_\'-eight. FIRST SCHOOL BUILDING. The first school building in Greensljurg was completed in 1863 by R. B. Thomson, contractor, at a cost of twehe thousand dollars. It was located on Monfort street, midway between Xorth and ^^^ashington streets, on what was then known as the Luther lot. The erection of this building was begun by the town school board, composed of Samuel Christy, W. A. Donnell and Barton Wilson. Two additions were later added to this lot. The high school addition, a two-stoiy affair, was erected in 1876, and used until the present high school building was opened. When the first building was in the course of construction a workman fell from its walls and was killed. For many years the tradition lingered that the ghost of the unfortunate mechanic lurked in the basement of the building, and many a child held to the straight and narrow path of school discipline through fear of being sent to the basement in punishment for mis- demeanors. The real beginning in earnest of the schools was not until 1862, when the "seat of learning" was transferred from the "old seminary" in the south- east part of the city, to the present site on ^Vest Washington street. The location of this site was made by popular vote. B. F. Brewington was superintendent when the new building was first used in the fall of 1862, and he remained four years, being succeeded ^y J. R. Hall, who was at the helm in 1866-67, and J. W. Culley in 1867-68. The school had grown in 1867 until the enrollment was six hundred and sixty-nine. A new era dawned on the schools in the fall of 1868, when Prof. C. W. HIGH SCHOOL r.riLDING. GltKENSBT'ItG. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 193 Harvey became superintendent. He remained at the head of the schools for thirteen years, and by his ]jlanning- and firm executive ability he set the schools upon a higher plane of usefulness than they had ever been before. At the conclusion of his term in 1881 there were eight hundred and tvveuty-si.\ pupils in the schools and fourteen teachers employed. GREENSBURG HIGH SCHOOL. Near the close of Professor Harvey's first year, 1869, the high school department was instituted in the same building where the common branches were taught. Until 1875, when the high school addition was erected, the school had the competition of the i)ri\-ate school which was managed by Mrs. Abbie Bonner. The Greensburg- high school began its career on September 5, i86g. with Miss Rebecca Thomson as principal. Rev, J. R. Walker, a nati\'e of Ireland and a well-remembered United Presbvterian preacher, was professor of languages. Prof. C. W. Harvey was superintendent, but was ill and not able to be in school the first week. Miss Thomson came here from Rising Sun in 1808, and went from here to Franklin College. Other teachers of the schools at this time were : Mary Howells, Cin- cinnati ; Mehitable Fowler, Troy; Amelia Holby, Kate Cimningham, Alary Wilson, Almira Thomson, Bell Carroll and Mrs. Rebecca Rhiver. The first high school commencement exercises were held at the Baptist church on May 19, 1871. There were two graduates, Miss Ida R. Stout and Miss Anna Myers, who afterward won distinction in the New York jour- nalistic field. On this memorable occasion the two young lady graduates read essays which were pronounced credital:)le productions Ijy the hearers. There were five graduates at the second annual commencement, which was held at the Christian church. Those who were members of the class of 1872 were Mollie Paul, Mary Christy, Jennie Williams, Lizzie Shirk and Lou Pope. Mr. Po]ie later became head of a Chicago educational concern. In 1873 Ida and Herschel Wooden and Belle White were granted diplomas. There were about fifty students in high school at that time. The grade teachers then were as follows: Rebecca Rhi\er, Seymour Pierce, Allie Thomson, Mamie Wilson, Lizzie Dobyns, Mary Howells, Ame- lia Holby, Mary E. Wilson, Maggie Stoner and Mary Elcock. The high school grew steadily in popularity as people percei\'ed its value and in a very few years classes of considerable size were being graduated. (13) 194 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. As years went by, more and more students saw tlie necessity of secondary school training and entered the high school direct from the common branches. In 1876 the attendance had so increased that added c^uarters were ren- dered necessary, and a brick addition, fifty by eighty feet, was built, in 1877, at a cost of fifteen thousand dollars. Tiie trustees then were W. A. Donnell, Samuel Christy and Doctor Bracken. The addition is still in use for the grades. The first principal of the new high school was W. P. Shan- non, who served until 1882, when he became superintendent of the city schools, succeeding Superintendent Harvey. ]Mr. Shannon died on Decem- ber 16, 1897. C. T. Hottell became the principal when Mr. Shannon was given the superintendency. He was followed by David Curry and George L. Roberts. Mr. Roberts ser\ed the high school for ten years and then went to Indiana University in the summer to take his Bachelor's degree. He returned to Greensburg for the following school year, and upon the death of Mr. Shan- non was appointed to take the superintendency. He remained here until 1901, and then went to Frankfort, and later to Muncie. He is now at the head of the department of education in Purdue University. The next high school principal was Edgar N. Mendenhall, who served six years and resigned in 1903 to become county superintendent. Superin- tendent Roberts was succeeded in 1901 by D. M. Geeting, former state superintendent of public instruction, a man of broad experience, who was thoroughly acquainted witli all branches of school work. He served until 1903. and then left Greensburg to become deputy state statistician, a posi- tion he held until his death. Superintendent Jerman, the present incum- bent, succeeded Professor Geeting in 1903. There have been graduates every year except 1883, when the high school course was enlarged and another year's w'ork added. There have also been five colored graduates from the Greensburg high school, but none of recent years. The enrollment in 1908-09 had been the largest up to that time. It was as follows: High school, 184; West building, 679; East build- ing, 284. Total, 1,147. The high school had reached such proportions bv 1912 that it was deemed necessary to provide larger and more modern quarters. The con- tract was let on August 16, 191 2, for the erection of a new high school build- ing by Trustees W. C. Woodfill, John F. Russell and Dr. R. M. Thomas. Pulse & Porter were awarded the contract for $65,410.09. It was completed in the wdnter of 1914, and, although not entirely finished, the high school classes were first held in the new building in the winter term of that year. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 195 There have been 753 graduates from tlie Greensburg liigh school in its forty-six years of existence, 267 boys and 486 girls making up the list, ac- cording to the figures gleaned from the Standard. The Greensburg schools have attained their high state of development through a long series of educational efforts, and the good citizens of this city deserve a great amount of praise in contributing so nobly to this cause and standing behind all educational ventures which have been carried on bV the different heads from the l^eginning of the school systems. The higli school stands today in the front ranks, and in looking back over the educa- tional history of the county it can be seen that the early seeds of education which were sown by such illustrious men as Professor May and others are being reaped by our present generation in their modern building and the up-to-date instructors. ADAMS TOWN.'^IIIP SCHOOLS. The ]3resent status of the schools in Decatur county may be discussed by townships. Adams township has three consolidated schools and one district school. The largest of these schools is located at St. Paul. This is a commissioned high school and its history and developments will be taken up later. The next consolidated school in this township in point of size is located at Adams. This school is equipped with a modern jjuilding and, in addition to the regular grade work, three 3-ears of high school work are taught. F'our hacks serve as a means of transportation to the children who attend this school and five teachers administer to the intellectual wants of the children. The third consolidated school is located at St. Omer. The regular grade work is taught in this school, but the high training is secured at St. Paul. The district school is supplied by one teacher, who has charge if all the grades. CLAY TOWNSHIP SCHOOLS. - Clay township has within its limits two consolidated schools and two district schools, in addition to a joint district school which accommodates the ))upils from Clay and Sand Creek township and is located on the township line. The largest of these consolidated schools is located at Burney. This is a commissioned high school and aft'ords excellent opportunities to the pupils of this section for high-school training. The children are furnished with seven hacks to bring them to the seat of learning in the township and the school is well attended. Although the building is large and the school 196 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. has been provided with sufficient teachers to accommodate them in the past, still in the last few years, owing to the general trend of children from the district schools to the consolidated schools, the capacity of the school has been crowded to the limit and plans are already rmder way to enlarge the present building in order that the increase in enrollment can Ije properly taken care of. Clifty is also provided with a consolidated school, but only for grade work. This school has three teachers who administer to the grade pupils. Two district schools are located in the rural districts of the township and are each su])plie(I with one teacher, who has charge of all the grades. CLINTON TOWNSHIP CONSOLIDATED SCHOOL. Clinton township was originally divided into four school districts, each district being accommodated with a one-room school building. The school enumeration of Sandusky having increased, it was necessary to add another room to the building there. The first .steps toward consolidation were made in 1894 under rather singular circumstances. A teacher had been hired to teach the schocjl at district No. 2. When the day arrived for the opening of the school year the teacher was present, but not a pupil put in his appearance, as they had all entered the Sandusky schools. The teacher continued going to the school and finally the trustee compromised with her for one-half of her salary. This was the beginning of consolidation in Clinton township. The enrollment steadily increased and in 1896 another room was added. In 1900 one school hack was introduced for the transportation of children to and from the Sandusky schools. The second district school to be aban- doned was district No. 4, which occurred in 1905. The following }-ear the third and last district school was abandoned, with the resignation of the teacher in charge of that school. This left Sandusky the center of the schools of Clinton township and, with the added enrollment from the other three districts, the school build- ing was not large enough to accommodate the pupils. In August, 1907, another room was added to relie\-e the congestion. In 1898 the two-year high school course was offered and in 1907-08 the rooms were di\-ided and a teacher placed in charge of each room. The state superintendent's report shows that Clinton was the first township in the state to have a completely consolidated school, with necessary conveyances to carry the children to and from school. All was progressing very nicely until January 21, 19 10, when the entire building and its contents were destroved bv fire. The term of DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. ip7 school was unfinished and it was necessary to finish the school in the Metho- dist church and three private dwellings. In the spring of the same year (1910) Trustee E. L. Meek let the contract for a $15,750 school huilding, which was to be erected during the summer. The l)uilding is located on the north side of town and on the Ft. Wayne pike. It is on the site of the old ijuilding, but the grounds were enlarged by the purchase of an acre of ground. This building was completed in the fall of 1910 and school was held in it for the first time that year. The building is one of the most beautiful, modern and well-equipped consolidated school buildings in this part of the state. There are three rooms on the first floor for the different grades and the second floor is taken up with the eighth- grade room, high school room and auditorium. The enrollment for 19 15 in the high school was seventeen. There were four grade teachers and the high school superintendent. The teachers, and grades over which they have charge, are as follow : Kirby Payne, high school; Carrie Thackery, seventh and eighth grades; Janie Martin, fiftii and si.xth grades ; Mary Cushman, third and fourth grades ; Mabel McDowell, primary. The basement is divided into two large play rooms, one for each sex. Six hacks are utilized in transporting the children to and from this seat of learning. Consolidation has proved successful in Clinton township on account of the small size of the township and the excellent financial condition at the present time. FUGIT TOWNSHIP. Fugit township has not made such rapid advancements in the lines of consolidation as some of her sister to\vnships. The only consolidated school in this township is located at Clarksburg. This school received its commis- sion in 1913, graduating the first class in 1914. This school is well attended and has a very modern course of study. Kingston has one of the most unique schools in the county. A new country school building was erected, at a cost of thirteen thousand dollars. It was the intention of the founder to form a commtmity school. This building has two rooms, with a large assembly room in the basement, covering the entire first floor, and is modern in every respect. One striking feature of this building is the lighting system which includes a large .skylight. At present only one teacher is employed in this school and the attendance the past year was only twenty. A Catholic school is located at St. Morris. This luiilding is owned by the church, but the teachers are employed by the township and are approved by the citizens 198 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. of this parish. The building has two rooms and two teachers are regularly employed. There are also two district schools in this township. JACKSON TOWN.SHIP. Jackson township has the greatest number of consolidated schools, no district schools remaining in this township. The five consolidated schools in this township are located as follows : Xewburg, Waynesburg, Alert, Big- horn and Sardina. The four first-named schools have only two teachers, who administer to the wants of the children, while the last named has three. Two years high school work is taught in all of these schools, in addition to the regular course of study for the grades. MARION TOWNSHIP. Marion township, owing to its unfortunate location in not being sup- plied with the proper railroad or interurban facilities, has made no advance- ment in the line of consolidation. The condition of the roads in this town- ship make consolidation almost an impossibility. There are eleven district schools located over this township and one teacher supplies each of these schools. There is also a parochial school, located at Alilhousen. Four teachers are employed to administer to the children of this locality. One of these teachers, however, is employed by the jiublic, the church exercising power in the choosing of this teacher. SALT CREEK TOWNSHIP. Salt Creek township has lately made rapid ad\"ancements in the consoli- dation of its schools. In IQ09 a school building was erected at Newpoint, at a cost of twelve thousand dollars. This school maintains a three-years high school, in addition to the grade work. There are also three district schools remaining in this township, which have not been changed by the consolida- tion. Among those, who, in more recent years, served as teachers in the schools of Salt Creek township, are: G. M. Card, Ellen Moody, James D. White, John H. Bobbitt, Dennis O'Dea, H. \V. Jenkins, ]\Irs. H. W. Jenkins, Ed Glidewell, Grover C. Harding. J. G. Collicott, now superintendent of the Indianapolis city schools, received his elementary education in this township, as did also Lewis A. Harding, prosecuting attorney, and Anna B. Collins, of Indiana l'ni\-ersity. Fred Baas was principal of the Newpoint schools in DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. I99 SAND CREEK TOWNSHIP. Sand Creek township has one consohdated school, located at Letts. This school building has been remodeled and affords very modern and com- modious quarters for the young aspirants for knowledge. This school also presents a commissioned high school course of study and the enrollment for the past year totaled forty-four. Westport also has an up-to-date high school, with an enrollment of eighty-five. There are six outlying district schools in this township, which have not experienced the advantages of a consolidated district. WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP. Washington township has two consolidated grade schools, supplied with two teachers each. There are also three district schools in this township, which cannot be consolidated. The high school students of this township are accommodated by the Greensburg high school, which is dealt with in its proper place. Summarizing the different township schools of this county, it can be easily seen that there is a marked advancement toward consolidation and centralization. The citizens of this county, as in other counties, are begin- ning to realize the greater advantages which can be gained from a consoli- dated school, which affords more high-salaried teachers and better educa- tional facilities than could be received through many scattered one-room schools. WESTPORT HIGH SCHOOL. The first school at W'estport was taught in tlie year 1845 ''}' 'i ^^r. Bid- dinger. This school house was a one-room log building, having seats around the wall, a large stove in the center of the room and recitation benches arrayed in a quaint manner around the stove. These benches and seats were made of rough-hewn .logs which were not promoters of comfort. The ses- sions of the school during the first winters after the building was erected never exceeded three months and the average attendance was estimated at about thirty. In 1859 this log building was re])laced by a two-story Ijrick structure, erected on the site of the old log school house. The upper room was used as a town hall, but soon the school attendance was increased and conse- quently this was used for class purposes. Mr. Strickland taught the first school in this new brick building. He also was the first teacher to introduce 200 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. high-school stucHes in the curricuhmi of the school course. When he retired from the field of teaching this work was dropped and was not taught again until the present school building was erected. Under Mr. Strickland's leader- ship the attendance of the school was increased, tlie average then being alK.iut sixtv-fi\-e pupils. Two teachers were regularly employed and, some years, the attendance was increased until it was necessary to add another teacher. The increased attendance also brought about the necessity for larger and mure modern quarters, Init this could not be provided at that time, so a frame room was built for a temporary means of relieving the congestion. The publication of a weekly school ]iaper was begun about this time and became quite an interesting factor among the students. After the building of the railroad, the attendance of the school rapidly increased and the school soon boasted of an attendance of one hundred and twenty students. The majority of these were enrolled at the brick building, as the frame room was only used for the primarv grades. The average length of the term was from six to seven months, and from three to four teachers were employed. The present building was erected in 1896. It was originally a two- stor\- brick Ijuilding, containing four rooms and two halls. The average attendance at tliat time was about two hundred and twenty-five and from f(3ur to five teachers were employed. In 1909 the building was enlarged b}' the addition of two new rooms. The original two upper rooms were converted into one large auditorium and a laborator\-, and a recitation room was' also ailded to the liasement. The school was commissioned in 1909-10 and additional improvements have been made to the building since that time. The school is furnished with modern equipment and devices, is both comfortable and attractive and has an a\erage attendance at present of two hundred and eighty. The school has been under the leadership of Supt. Oscar \V. Holmes since its commission to the first grade ranks. Sui)erintendent Holmes is a graduate of Indiana State Normal School and ranks with the foremost educators of tlie day. Since its commission Westport high school has graduated eighty students from its ranks who are now engaged in various callings. .\thletics is a great factor in the regular work of the school life. Domestic science and agriculture have also been added to the curriculum of studies. The common school attendance a\'erages two hundred and the high .school attendance is placed at eighty. Seven teachers are employed. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 20I ST. PAUL SCHOOL. The history of the St. Paul schools, as with all of the early schools of Indiana, begin with the little log school house. In the year 1851, when the surrounding country was one vast wooded territory, with scattered settle- ments, there was established a small scliool in the little village of St. Paul. This was the beginning of an educational program, the end which has not been reached, but is still pushing ever higher. The interior of this room was characteristic of all the early log school buildings. A large fireplace occupied one end of this building, and at the opposite end was a small plat- form, on which the early pedagogue held his sway. The desks were made of half logs, with their flat face hewn smooth, and the seats were similarly constructed. Along the wall was a long, smooth, wide board used for writ- ing. The three R"s — reading, writing and arithmetic — were the only sub- jects taught. Such was the beginning of the school system in St. Paul. About the year 1856 the quarters of the school was changed to a frame building, Init this was only a temporary change. The next move was to the second story of what was then known as the Ridlen building, but is nov^' occupied by Mr. Johannes' bugg)- shop. Some of the teachers who saw active service there were Mr. Madison, George Stotsenburg, David Sutton, Dr. and Mrs. Ballard. Spelling was one of the chief di\ersions in the schools of this time and many good spellers were developed. After several years, the school again shifted and this time established in the building which is now the home of Henry Neidigh. The growth of the schools had reached such proportions at this time that two rooms and two teachers \\-ere re(juired. Among the names of the teachers who served at this time were James Scull, ;\Irs. D. J. Ballard, Eunice Paul, Charles Powner, George Stotsenburg and Doctor Ballard. One of these who is especially remembered by the pupils is Charles Powner. Air. Powner was a near-sighted man, of little training, and the boys found plenty of time and opportunity for fun at his expense. It was during this period of school that the people became di\ided on religious and political \iews and this, in turn, split up the school system. There were then established three different schools, besides the remnant of the public school. They were located as follows : One in the Methodist church, one in the Catholic church, and one in the Floyd building. The latter was a pri\-ate school established liy the Madison and Woodard families, the former being sectarian schools. This factional difference was soon adjusted and in 1870-71 a new school build- 202 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. ing was erected on the site of the present high school Iniilding. This was a large, sfjiiare, brick Ijuilding erected by Trustee Benjamin Jenkins. It con- tained six class rooms and a large assembly room. Each morning the entire school would gather in the large assembly room for the opening exercises, which consisted of singing, etc. Grailuall}' the courses were enlarged by the addition of a few high school subjects, but the exact date of this is unknown, although the first graduates of .this one-year course are given as Flo Hoover and Frank Ray. The first teacher in that high school was ]Mr. Alcott. This was merely an incentive toward the greater work of making this a standard high school. A short time later a three-year course was added and this was maintained until the old building was destroyed by fire. The teachers who assisted in the old building were Mr. Lewark, principal; Mr. Jewett, number four; Mrs. Jewett, number two, and Mrs. Viola Palmerton, number one. The building was destroyed by fire in 1901 and work was immediately begun on the erection of a new building, but this was not accomplished in time for school work that winter and, in consequence, school was held in the rooms of the Kanouse and Floyd buildings. In 1902 the building was completed, but the courses of study remained the same. A little later the standard for Indiana high schools was raised by the Legislature and Mr. Crawlev was placed in charge of the schools. Too much jiraise cannot be given to Mr. Crawley for his efforts in raising the St. Paul schools to their present standing. The advancement of this high school has been marked and. with the assistance of the patrons, Mr. Crawley has been able to meet all (if the demands of the state board of education and keep St. Paul high school in the first rank of commissioned schools of the country. It was commissioned in the fall of 191 1. Nearly all lines of work are now demanding a high-school education. Competition is driving men in e\ery field of endeavor to make better prepa- ration. As a result, ad\'anced schools for farming, business, theology, medi- cine and law are demanding that students shall have completed a standard four-year high school course before taking up their college or advanced work. The patrons of this school have fully realized this and, in order that their children might be able to go forth into the world and cope with gradu- ates from other schools on an equal footing, they have seen to it that their high school should add all of the different advanced courses in learning and offer every inducement for the home training. The high school has graduated approximately thirty-five students in t> DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 203 their four years of commissioned standing. Professor Crowley have served as superintendent for the school for thirteen years and deserves a good por- tion of the praise due this high school. There are seven teachers and two hundred students at present in grades and high school. The high school alone employs three teachers and has an enrollment of fifty students. CHAPTER MIL THE CHURCHES OF DECATUR COUNTY. There is no more potent factor in the hfe of any community than the church, and tiie influence of an acti\e denomination is measured by the wholesome spirit which may be found in the community. More than ninety years have elapsed since the first settlers of Decatur county made their per- manent homes here, and within that time more than ninety churches have arisen in the county. Many of them have long since closed their careers, but the good which they accomplished still remains. There are those who main- tain that the people of today are not as religious as the pioneers of the state, ]:)ut things religious are not to Ije measured l.)\- human standards. The mere fact that there are fewer churches in Decatur county today than fifty years ago does not argue that the people are any the less religious; neither does it imply that the life of people is of a lower standard than it was in the "good old days," which some like to think were nearer the millenium. Churches may come and churches may go, but a better civilization is not gauged by the mere number of churches. ^lany factors have entered into the disappearance of the rural church, and not the least of these is the shift- ing of population from the country to the towns and \'illages. For this same reason, there are hundreds and even thousands of public schools throughout Indiana which ha\e been discontinued within the past twenty-five years. Manv a neighljorhood which had from fifty to seventy-five school children half a century ago cannot even sup]3ort a school with the minimum number of twelve required by the law at the present time. This ever-increasing drift from rural to urban centers affects not only the church and the school, but our national life along all lines. Nor does it mean, in any sense of the word, that we are becoming less religious because of fewer churches, or more ignor- ant because of the abandonment of so many rural schools. There can be no cpiestioning the fact that Decatur county has passed through a marked religious change during the past three-quarters of a cen- tury, nor can it be denied that things nnght be better. Yet it must be admit- ted that the people of the county are living lives today much closer to the Ten Commandments than ever before. History tells us that our good fore- DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 2O5 fathers were not always as good as we have usually pictured them; could we of today see them in their daily life we would he surprised at some of the things they did. The great majority of them drank — and drank whisky; they were very profane: they were prone to fight: they grafted in public affairs just as has been done since; they had many shortcomings which we have not been accustomed to associate with them. Yet, they were relig- ious — though the preacher often worked his sermon nut with the aid of a whisky flask. In those cold churches of the twenties and thirties the Ijottle was called upon to supply the heat denied by the old fireplace or rude stove. It was the way people lived in those days; in their view a bottle of whisky was as essential to the fanner on harvest day as the bottle of machine oil is today. Under truly pioneer conditions did our forefathers live for many years, and to see them file into church on Sunday morning in the thirties, one would certainly think so. An old settler, writing in 1830, tells of going to church at Westport, "where most of the congregation was barefooted. Some wore moccasins, some buckskin lireeches and hunting shirts, with coon, fo.x or 'possum-skin caps on their heads. Many of the caps were ornamented with fo.x tails. One old man and his spouse rode to the meeting on a big red bull." According to the custom of the period, the men sat on the left side of the center aisle and the women on the right. Husbands and wives and sweet- hearts went to and from church together, but sat apart during ser\'ices, lest their attention be distracted from the parson's discourse. Says Mrs. Martha Stevens, writing of a Greensburg church of early days : "Then ladies used to sing treble, and you would often hear a lady away above the congregation. They thought it was fine, but, under the new way, the men sing the tenor. The hymns were lined, as it was then called. Two lines would be given out by the minister or clerk, then sung by the congregation, then two more lines would be read and sung." Our forefathers in Decatur countv did not worship in beautiful churches, but gathered in their own homes, in school buildings, in groves when the weather permitted, and even in barns. They neither grumbled nor com- plained, but were joyful and happy with the lot Providence had seen fit to give them. Their ser\-ices were very irregular: they li;id no Sabl:)ath schools and no musical instruments. Without any of the modern attractions which are now deemed a necessary part of the church, they worshipped in a quiet, simple and very unostentatious manner. Often weeks must pass without a regular minister, and then some pioneer conducted the services, if not in an 206 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. orthodox manner, yet with that true Christian spirit which found favor with the Giver of all good things. In these humble meetings — and often the lit- tle band did not number over a dozen — they thanked God for what He had vouchsafed them and asked Him to continue His blessings toward them. And who is there to say that they did not do all they could to advance the kingdom of Heaven. We want a religion that softens the step and tunes the voice to melody and fills the eye with sunshine and checks the impatient exclamation and harsh rebuke. A religion that is polite, deferential to superiors, courteous to inferiors, and considerate to friends ; a religion that goes into the family and keeps the husband from being cross when the dinner is late and the wife from fretting when he tracks the floor with his muddy boots, and makes him mindful of the scraper and doormat; keeps the mother patient when the baby is cross, and amuses the children as well as instructs them ; cares for the servants besides paying them promptly ; projects the honeymoon into the harvest moon; makes a happy home like the Easter fig tree, bearing in its bosom at once the beauty of the ripened fruit. We want a religion that shall interpose between the ruts, gullies and the rocks of the highway of life and the sensitive souls that are traveling over them. And who shall say that the simple faith of our forefathers was not as potent in bringing all this about as the religion preached today. The Baptists and Methodists were the first to establish churches in Decatur county, and they were closely followed by a number of other denom- inations. The Presbyterians and Christians (erroneously called the Camp- bellites) were early in the field, and b}- the middle of the last century more than fifty churches were scattered throughout the county. The Protestants had the field to themselves until 1840, when the first Catholic church was established, and since that year the Catholics have steadily grown in power and influence. The}' have many strong congregations in the county, most of their members being of German birth or descent. But, whether Protest- ant or Catholic, the influence of the church is always e.xerted in behalf of cleaner living and for a higher conception of the brotherhood of man and the fatherhood of God. In the discussion of the churches of Decatur county it seems best to submit a list of all the churches, both acti\'e and discontinued, which have appeared at one time or another in the history of the county. For the ])ur- pose of location, they are given by townships, and by section if in the rural districts. It may be a surprise to many people of Decatur count}- to know that DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 207 there lia\e been more tlian ninety different chnrch organizations in the connly since its organization in 1822, bnt a study of the rehgious history of the county reveals the fact that there have been that many in existence at one time or another. A surprisingly large number of these churches are now discontinued and many others are strugghng with a few menil)crs and irreg- ular services. Churches representing the following denominations ha\"e been found in the county: African Methodist Episcopal. Baptist (three kinds), Christian (Campbellites), Christian (Newlights), Christian Science, Christian Union, Episcopal, Free Will Methodists, Holiness. Lutheran, Mediodist Episcopal, Methodist Protestant, Pentecostal, Presbyterian (two branches), United Brethren and Catholic. In many cases the location of the church is designated 1)y section. Where the section is given it refers to the section, township and range of the par- ticular civil township. The list follows : Adams Township — Baptist, Adams, Mt. Moriah ( discontinued ) and New Little Flat Rock ; Catholic. St. Paul : Christian, Adams arid St. Paul ; Methodist, Adams, St. Omer (discontinued), St. Paul and Shiloh (discon- tinued) ; Presbyterian, St. Omer (discontinued); Union church, section 34; United Brethren, St. Omer and Union Chapel. Clay Township — Baptist, Burney and Mt. Hebron (discontinued) ; Christian, Clifty: Methodist, Cliffy and Burney; unknown, section 36, south. Clinton township — Christian, section 2 ; Methodist, Sandusky. Fugit Township — Catholic. St. Maurice; Christian, Clarksburg; Meth- odist, Clarksljurg, Mt. Carmel and St. Maurice (discontinued); Presbyter- ian, IMemorial (section 20), Kingston, Clarksburg and Springhill. Jackson Township — Baptist, Dry Fork (discontinued). Mt. Pleasant, Sardinia, and Mt. Pisgah (discontinued); Christian, Waynesburg; Chris- tian Union, Alert; ]\Iethodist, Alert, Asbury (discontinued) and Wesley Chapel; Presbyterian, Forest Hill and Sardinia (discontinued); United Brethren. Sardinia. Marion Township — Baptist, Sandcreek, Rock Creek and Antioch ; Cath- olic, Millhousen; Christian, Antioch (discontinued); ^Methodist, Burke's Chapel and Mt. Plea.sant; unknown, section 27, north. Salt Creek Township — Baptist, Rossburg; Catholic. Enochsburg; Chris- tian, Mechanicsburg and Newpoint; German Lutheran, section 26; German Methodist, section 23 ; Methodi.st, section 32. Sand Creek Township — Baptist, Mt. Aerie, Letts, Friendship, Westport, 208 nECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. and section 28: Christian, W'estport : Methodist, \\'estport, Letts, section 2^ and section 18, south; L'nited Brethren, hVedonia : unknown, section 4, east. Washini^ton Township — Baptist, Lilierty, Sandcreek (moved to Mar- ion township); Baptist, section 28; Christian ( Newli![;;ht) ; Methodist, sec- tion 15, south. Greensburg — African Metliodist, Baptist, Cathohc, Cliristian, Christian Science, Episcopal, HoHness, Lutheran, ]Metho(hst Pnitestant. ^lethocHst Episcopal (two churches), Presbyterian. One difticulty in locating these churches is in identifying the church witli the local name. Three Sand Creek churches, two Antiochs, two Mt. Pleasants, two Mt. Moriahs and two Flat Rocks have been found. One church still shelters two separate congregations — Lower Union — in Marion township. The Baptists call it Rock Creek and the United Brethren know it as Lower Union, the oldest title l)y which the people of that neighl)orliood know it. One of the Antiochs was torn down several )'ears ago, mo\-ed to Greensburg and is now the home of the Pentecostal (Holiness) band of worshi]:)pers. Another iilace of \vorship in tlic county seat enjoys the sug- gestive title of Ark. METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCHES. In 19 1 5 there were eighteen active Methodist churches in Decatur county, as follow, the names of the pastors also being given : Greensburg, First, J- H. Doddridge; Greensburg, Centenary, J. Ed. Murr ; (ireensburg. Colored, T. W. Daniels; Milford. J. A. Gardner; Adams, J. A. Gardner; Westport, T. J- Lewis; Letts, T. J. Lewis; Mt. Pleasant, T. J. Lewis; Burk's Chapel, T. J. Lewis; Clarksburg, C. E. Hester; Sandusky, C. E. Hester; Mt. Carmel, C. E. Hester; Newpoint, H. A. Broadwell; Middlebranch, H. A. Broadwell ; New Pennington, H. A. Broadwell; Alert, William Die Hart; Wesley Chapel, William De Hart; Burney, Joseph H. Laramore. Although there were Methodist meetings in Decatur county at a very early date, little is known of the activities of tliis denomination before 1835, as most of the work was done in small classes and no records of them were kept. But it is known that among the first settlers of this county were hardy, two-fisted Methodist ministers, ready to turn a hand in the clearing and at other rough toil or to preach, pray and e.xhort. L'ncultured and unkempt as most of them were, yet they brought with them a message that could not pass unheeded, for they were marching in the vanguard of a mili- tant denomination. CEXTKXAKY M. K. CIUKCII. ItAI'TIST CIintCH. OLD FIK.ST M, K. rlllUCII. rP.ESHYTKKIA.N ('IHUCII. so.MK (;Ki;i:.\sr.ri:(i CHntcHKS. FIRST M. K. CHrRCH. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 209 Most of these early ministers of the gospel have been forgotten, the names of many of them have l^een lost, forever, and stately temples tower high on the sites of the rude cabins in which they first summoned sinners to repentance. The names and deeds of a few of them are still i)reser\-ed through the lapse of almost a centur\-. James Murray was the first of the }ilethudist circuit riders to enter the "New Purchase." Then there was James Havins, "Old Samuel" they called him, will) for fift)" \-ears rode circuits and served as presiding elder. There were John Havens and John Linville, camp-meeting singers, well worthy of the name, who would compare most favorably with the exangelistic singers of today. Nor should Daniel Stogsdill be forgotten, "old Dan Stogsdill," who walked more miles, organized more churches and preached more free sermons than any other man in Decatur county. And last, there was James Hobbs, one of the first settlers at Clarksburg, and an old man then, "l^reacher of the gospel — ordained," he styled himself. Besides, there were many others, but their names have been lost to the historian. METHODISM IN GREENSBURG. During the ninety-three years which have elapsed since 1823 the Meth- odist church has been an active factor in the religious life of Greensburg. Its history, like that of Ancient Gaul, ma}' be divided into three parts, for in the ninety-three years there have been no less than three separate congrega- tions in the city — and all three claiming to be founded on the doctrines as enunciated by the Wesleys. The historian in attempting to follow these three distinct congregations from their inception down to the present time is seriously handicapped by not having access to all the several church records. Then again, there is no cjuestion which excites such violent prejudices as does the religious question. The causes leading to the various divisions in the Methodist church in Greensburg are fairly well defined, }-et an impartial historian in such a case would not dare to rely altogether on what people have to say concerning the matter. The following discussion of the First Methodist, Centenary and Methodist Protestant churches of Greensburg is based on church records which have been examined, on articles appearing in the newspapers at the time the various divisions occurred, and, finally, on personal interviews with people representing each of the three churches. An attempt has been made to treat the question from a historical and not a doctrinal viewpoint. (14) 2r0 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. FIRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH. It should Ije Stated in the laeginniiig that there was only one Methodist Episcopal church in Greensburg up to the spring of 1866, the year when the first division occurred which resulted in the establishment of the present Centenary church. These two congregations still maintain their separate organizations. The third Methodist church was the result of a split in the congregation of the Centenary church in the spring of 1877, but this third branch has long since disappeared. With this brief statement of facts, the history of the First Methodist church, the only one in the city from 1822 to 1866, is taken i\\> and followed to the time of the great schism of 1866. In a ponderous volume, entitled "Church Record," the history of the beginning of Methodism in Greensburg has been preserved. While Rev. Charles Tinsley was pastor of the First Methodist church in 1881, he pre- pared a "History of Methodism in Greensburg, Indiana," which appears on the first few pages of the above mentioned "Church Record." His account was undoubtedly prepared with a view of presenting the main facts and the historian uses it verbatim : "John Robbins, who is living at this date (September 13, 1881), in Greensburg, states that he settled near Mt. Pleasant Methodist Episcopal church, March 28. 1822, four miles south of Greensburg. The first Metho- dist sermon he heard in the county was about September of the same year by Rev. James Murray, of the Connersville circuit — then of the Ohio con- ference — at the double log cabin of Col. Thomas Hendricks [in Greens- burg]. Mr. Robl)ins immediately afterward received authority by letter from Mr. Murray to iirganize a class, which he did at his own house, and from this [grew] the first religious organization in the county. After this he [Robbins] attendeil the organization of the Baptist church at Sand Creek. "The members of this first Methodist class were John and Ruth Rob- bins, Robert Courtney, Elizabeth Garrison, John H. Kilpatrick and Mary, his wife — seven persons, and soon afterward [they were joined by] Jacob Steward, A. L. Anderson, Mary Garrison, Tamzen Connor, Lydia Groen- d}-ke, Re\-. ^Vesley White and wife Elizal^eth, and James and Polly Arm- strong. "When the Greensburg class was formed Jacob Stewart was transferred to it. [Where he had previously belonged is not stated,] The Robbins neighborhood has remained a preaching ])lacc ever since. In 1834 a log DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 2X1 church was Iniilt and called Mt. Pleasant — it was about twenty-four by thirty feet, and in 1870 this was replaced by the present frame of about thirty-six; by fifty feet, at a cost of three thousand dollars. [This is the church four miles south of Greensburg.] The most remarkable revival at this place was conducted by Landy Cravens, when sixty persons united with the church. Rev. George Winchester, the present [1881] pastor of the Greensburg church, to which this society belongs, says it is the strongest society on the circuit. It now [1881J has a membership of eighty and is properous. [This whole paragraph seems to have no connection with the Greensburg church, but it given just as Rev. Tinsley wrote it.] "Aaron Wood succeeded Mr. Murray for two months in the fall of 1823. He preached at Greensburg, Robbin's, McClain's, Emlie's, John Mil- ler's and John Shultz's in the county. Mr. Wood attended camp meeting on Shultz land, Septeiuber 22, 1823, but, meeting Jesse Hale at John Havens' house, he found he [Wood] was in the bounds of Mr. Hale's circuit and withdrew. [At this point in the narrative of Rev. Tinsley he gives a list of the pastors of the Greensburg church from 1822 to 1866, and then a list of those serving the First ?^Iethodist church up to the time his article was written in 1881. The complete list of pastors will be given later in the chapter.] "Father Robbins and Ezra Lathrop recollect the preaching of Jesse Hale at Col. Thomas Hendricks' house, where all preachers were welcome. Mr. Hendricks was a Presbyterian, yet a generous-hearted gentleman. His first cabin was situated near where Porter's old saw-mill stood. He built the first house on the public square and invited the preaching to that house. John Havens, a local preacher, who supplied the circuit, probably organized the first class. It consisted, perhaps, of Jacob Stewart and wife, Silas Stew- art and wife, John Ford and wife, Jared P. Ford and wife, Martin and Nancy Jamison, Isaac Plue and Plue. John F. Roszell and his brother Nehemiah were members in 1826. John Ford was class leader and a good one. The Roszells and Plues were blacksmiths — the former the first in the county. "Rev. Joseph Tarkington was appointed to the circuit, then called the Rushville circuit, in the fall of 1829. William Evans, his assistant, was married In- Tarkington, the latter still Iieing single. Evans lived in a log cabin on the corner of Franklin and Central avenues. Brother Tarkington's first sermon was in the grand jury room of the court house — southwest upper room. There were about thirty persons present. This room was frequently used b}- the Presbyterians and Baptists. Reverend Lowrey was 212 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. the Presbyterian minister and Rev. Daniel Stogsdale, tlie Haptist minister. Jaco1) Stewart was tiie class leader and steward. James Freeman was a local preacher. It was a four-weeks' circuit." Thus closes the history of "Methodism in Greenshurg." as written by Rev. Charles Tinsley in t88i. He devotes two pages and a half to a brief summary nf the lives of Joseph Tarkington, Asbur\- Wilkinsnu and LewTs Hurlbut, but of the history of the church since 1829 there is no account. It is to be regretted that he did not go into a discussion of the memorable division of 1866, Init of this schism he makes no mention whatever, nor, of course, says an_\'thing of the split in the Centenarv church in 1877. It is to be hoped that the Reverend Tinsley was a better preacher than he was a historian. In this "Church Record" is given a list of the probationers from March 7, 1863 (Martha Carter), to .\ugust 28, 1892 (David Mason Mur- phy). There is a record of se\'eral classes, but most of them are imdated, the last date appearing being September, 1887. An "Alpiiabetical Record of Members in b'ull Connection" occupies several pages and was evidently started after the dixision in 1866, since the first date noticed is October 6, 1867. The last date of the reception of a member is June 12, 1892. Thirty- four marriages are recorded, dating from December 25, 1867 (William I. Grant and Indiana Mendcnhall), to June 8, 1873 (Tamor McGranahan and Ellen Millis). The ministers ha\-e indicated the fees the\- received and it seems that the bridegrooms rated their brides at \'arying values. Some paid the minister nothing, some one dollar, other two dollars, several ten dollars and one man (Albert T. Beck) gladdened the preacher's heart with twenty dollars. FIR.ST METHODIST CHURCH (1829-I915). The Methodists graduallv grew in strength and intluence from the beginning and when the schism of l866 occurred they were by far the strongest church in the city. The first house of worship was built on lot 66 in 1834. The lot was purchased, I'^ebruary 23, 1834, for twenty-five dollars. This remained the hoiue of the congregation until i84(;, when a two-story brick, forty-five by si.xty feet, was built on the lot now occupied by the church. For a quarter of a century the congregation worshipped in this building and it was while they were still using it that dissension arose wdiich ultimately divided the congregation. During Doctor Gillett's pastorate arrangements were made to erect a new house of worship. The present building was finished and dedicated on December 12, 1875. Bishop Bowman, of St. Louis, preached the dedicatory sermon and the news- DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 213 paper account of tlie meeting says, "Many wept as the eloquent bishop touched the sympathies of the many hearts that were moved by his elo- (juence." I'ieverend Johnson, of Spring Hill, and Rev. C. J'. Jemkins, of Centenary, were in the pulpit. Hon. Will Cunihack made a statement at the close of the sermon that the churcii had cost thirty thousand dollars and that twenty-two thousand seven hundred dollars had already been raised. There was still two thousand dollars of unpaid pledges. The Bishop asked for six thousand dollars and the generous assem])lage raised four hundred dollars more than this amount before the meeting closed. David Lovctt and Doctor Bracken gave five hundred dollars each; Mr. Cumback, Walter Bra- den, John and Williar.i 'I'honias. three hundred dollars each. The Inulding is firt\- by ninety feet and will accommodate six hundred in the auditorium. The church silent about six thousand dollars in im])ro\ements in lyu. The present membership is about seven hundred. THE SCHISM OF 1866. History records that every innovation introduced into our social fabric is met with more or less oppcjsilion. An enumeration of all the causes which have lead to schisms in churches would reveal some very interesting things. Before the Civil War the question of slavery divided thousands of congre- gations into two rival cani])s. The use of intoxicants has l)een a prolific cause of dissension, and at least one church in Decatur county split on this question. Secret societies ha\'e been the means of creating hundreds of new congregations, especially in the United Ijrethren church. Missionary work, and even Sunday schools, have been opposed in Ba])tist churches in the past, and thus have arisen "Hardshell" and "Softshell" Bapti.sts. But of all the nonsensical causes for church divisions, the question of music seems to the modern way of thinking the most ludicrous. Just why so many of our good forefathers should ha\'e thought that an organ was an instrument of the de\-il is hard to say — but they did. Not only were many of them violently op- posed to instrumental music, but they refused to associate in church relation- ship with those who countenanced such an innovation. And the iiniocent organ — which today peals forth in both .Methodist churches in (ireensburg — was responsible for the schism of 1866. Christian charity and forbearance were thrown to the winds; the precejits of the thir- teenth chapter of Corinthians were forgotten; "love thy neighbor as thyself" was relegated to oblivion; men and women who had worshipped in the same pews for years, who had knelt around the altar rail in humble confession to 214 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. their Alaker, now separated their ways. And the innocent (jrgan was to blame. CENTENARY METHODIST CHURCH. Rew J. B. Lathrop, of Greensburg, then presiding elder, presided over the meeting on March i, 1866, when one hundred members withdrew from the First Methodist church (which before the schism had two hundred and seventy-eight members) for reasons above stated. Services were held in the high school building until the church was ready for occupancy. On March 18 they bought a lot for a new building; ten days later they fonnally organ- ized a church ; on April i they began work on their new building, although the cornerstone was not laid until August 25, 1866. By the last day of the year the lower story was ready for the first service, the sermon on that occa- sion being preached by Rev. F. C. Holliday. The building remained unfin- ished during 1867, and in January of the following year work was resumed and the auditorium completed. The dedicatory services were held on July 12, 1868. The building cost nineteen thousand dollars, of which amount the late GabrielWoodfill contributed fifteen hundred dollars. This building is still in use, although extensive improvements were made on it in 19 12. A new furnace, choir loft, inside stairway, opera chairs, hardwood floor, new roof and a refrescoed auditorium were the main improvements. Six months were consumed in making the repairs, which cost a little over five thousand dollars, three thousand of which had been raised before the church was reded- icated on Sunday, April 6, 1912. Bishop D. H. Moore, of Cincinnati, preached the sermon, and at the end of his discourse appealed for help to cancel the debt. The sum of $1,009.80 was raised at the morning service, and the amount was increased to $1,288.55 ^t the evening service, leaving a debt of only $836.45. A parsonage, adjoining the rear of the church, liad been constructed in 1904, under the ministry of Rev. J. E. Fisher. During the present pastorate of Rew J. E. Murr the church has been cleared of debt. The Centenary church, born under the influence of those opposed to the use of the organ in the church, waxed and grew strong. A revival under Rev. G. L. Curtis in 1867 resulted in the addition of sixty new members, and another revival during the winter of 1869-70, under the same pastor, added eighty-two more to the membership. The present membership is three hundred and fifty. A])out twelve of the charter members are still liv- ing. In June, 1867, a Sunday school was organized, which has continued to hold regular services from that date. Wesley Chapter, Epworth League, was organized February 23, 1893, and it has been a potent force in the life DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 2X5 of the church during its whole existence. The league now has a memher- ship of forty-seven. It has been said that the church grew in strength from year to year, but history must record a lamentabe division which took place in the church in 1877. Starting out with the avowed determination of never allowing an organ in the church, the passing of years brought about a change of senti- ment in some of the members. Before a decade had passed away it was discovered that some of the children were drifting to the Sunday school of the First Methodist church, and incjuiry revealed the fact that the hated organ was the cause of the deflection. The death of some of the more radi- cal anti-organists, the wise foresight of some of the leaders, and the wish to keep the congregation together, finally was the cause of an organ being installed, for Sunday school purposes only. Evidently the once despised instrument had won some friends in the church, and it was not long before the organ was being' carried upstairs for church services. This was more than some of the members could stand. Just as they had split off from the mother church in 1866, so did they decide to do the same thing from the Centenary congregation — and thus we come to the third and last division in ^Methodism in Greensburg. METHODIST PROTESTANT CHURCH. In July, 1877, fifty-two members of the Centenary church withdrew their membership and at once proceeded to build a church on Broadway across the railroad. It was a frame building, thirty by forty-fiVe feet, and cost thii-teen hundred dollars. They were not put to an expense for musi- cal instruments, their outlay in the musical line being confined to a nominal sum for hymn books. But there was one fact which they had evidently not considered. They were, in a sense, outside the pale of the Methodist Epis- copal church, and were not recognized by the conference. They dropped the suffix Episcopal and denonunated themselves the Methodist Protestant church. They added some members to their original roll, and at one time had a membership of something more than a hundred. The main families to throw their support to this third branch of Methodism in Greensburg were those of Gideon Drake, John Robbins, J. E. Roszell, James L. Fugit, Calvin H. Paraniore, D. Patton, J. B. Roszell, John A. Turner and C. Boring. They continued to hold together as a separate congregation until the early eighties, when the organization was disbanded. Some of the members returned to one or die other of the two Methodist Episcopal churches, some joined other 2l6 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. churches, hut most of them, 1)eiiig well along in years at the time of the division in 1877, have long since gone to the King of that kingdom where church schisms are unknown. EFFORTS TO UNITE FIRST AND CENTENARY CHURCHES. The discussion of Methodism in Cirecnsburg cannot be dismissed with- out reference to an effort made in 1909-10 to unite the First and Centenary churches. At that time Re\'. T. Iv. Willis was pastor of the Centenary church and William G. Clinton was presiding elder. At that time the Cen- tenary church was not in a very flourishing condition, and Rev. Willis became con\-inced in his own mind that the Ijest interests of Methodism would be ser\'ed Ijv a union of the two churches. He talked over the matter with some of his parishioners and advised them to take out their letters from the Centenary church and place them in the First church. Quite a number fol- lowed, his suggestion, although their action was dei)lore(l liy a large portion of the Centenary congregation. Rev. Willis communicated with the presiding elder. Rev. W. G. Clinton, in regard to the union of the two churches and the latter came to Greensburg, called a meeting of the official board of the Centenar}- churcli and ordered them to disljand and unite with the h'irst church. Evidently the ]M-esiding elder had lieen misinformed in regard to the feelings of the congregation, for he found that most of them were very much opposed to the union. The church absolutely refused to follow his order, and consequently nothing was done by the church as a congregation. However, some individual members withdrew and affiliated with the First church, while others withdrew their membership and still have the letters, having ne\er placed them with any church. .\t the time the papers of Greensljurg took up the agit;ition, and it seemed to be the 0])inion of those whose articles appear in the papers that the union of the two churches was a very desirable thing. This movement toward union, which came to a cli- ma.x in 1910, has been the last concerted effort looking toward a consolida- tion of the churches. Shortlv after this both began to make plans for the complete overhauling of their buildings, and since then have spent more than twehe thousand dollars in improvements. At the present time there does not appear to be any hope of a union for many years yet to come. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 217 PASTORS OF THE METHODIST CHURCH, 1822-1866. The following' ministers have served the Greensburg First Methodist Episcopal church; James Murray and I. Taylor, 1822; Aaron Wood, Jesse Hale and George Horn, 1823: John Havens, 1824; Stephen Beggs and John Strange, 1825; N. B. Griffith, r826; James Havens and John Kerns, 1827-28; Joseph Tarkington and William Evans, 1829; J. B. Sparks and J. C. Smith, 1830; S. W. Hunter and J. Kimble, 1831 ; C. Bonner and C. Swank, 1832; Joseph Tarkington, 1833: W. AI. Dailey, 1834; C. Bonner, 1835; J. Scott and L. M. Reeves, 1836; C. Bonner and A. Bussey, 1837: A. Bussey; Mel- ville Wiley and E. G. Wood, 1838: W. B. Ross, 1839; G. C. Beeks, 1840; J. W. Sullivan, 1841; F. C. Hohiday, 1842: J. S. Barwick, 1843: J. A. Brouse, 1844: James Havens, 1845: C. B. Davidson, 1846: J. W. Sullivan, 1847; E. H. Sabin, 1848; J. B. R. Miller, 1849; James Crawford, 1850-51; S. P. Crawford, 1852; A. Wilkinson, 1853; A. Nesbit, 1854: W. W. Hib- ben, 1855-56; Joseph Cotton, 1857-58: W. W. Snyder, 1859; J. W. Mellen- der, 1860-61; E. D. Long, 1862; S. Tincher, 1862; Charles Tinsley, 1863- 64; W. Terrill, 1865-66. With the schism of 1866 begins two separate Methodist churches in Greensburg and both ha\-e been independent charges from that date down to the present time. The following- ministers have served the First church : R. M. Barnes, 1866-69; S. T. Gihette, 1870-72; M. L. Wells, 1873-74; L. G. Adkinson, 1875-76; Sampson Tincher, 1877-79; Charles Tinsley, 1880- 81; John G. Chafee, 1881-84; E. L. Dolph, 1884-88; E. B. Rawls, 1888-92; J. W. Dashiell, 1896-97; F. S. Tincher, 1897-1900; John Poucher, 1900-01; George H. IMurphy, 1901-05; A. R. Beach, 1905-08; S. S. Penrod, 1908-10; M. B. Hyde, 1910-13; J. H. Doddridge, 1913 to the present time. PASTORS OF THE CENTENARY METHODIST CHURCH. The following ministers ha\'e had charge of the Centenary church: J. S. Winchester, 1866-67; G. I. Curtis, 1867-71: R. R. Roberts, 1871-73: Har- vey Harris, 1873-75; G. P. Jenkins, 1875-76; J. W. Mellender, 1876-78: W. S. Falkenburg, 1878-80: J. H. Doddridge. 1880-82; C. C. Edwards. 1882- 85: R. D. Black, 1885-88; W. W. Reynolds, 1888-92; L. D. Moore, 1892- 95; W. P. Barnhill, 1895-96: J. Wesley Maxwell, 1898-1901; John Mach- lin, 1901-03; J. E. Fisher, 1903-06; A. L. Bennett, 1906-08; J. U. Brown, 2l8 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 1908-09; T. K. Willis. 1909-10: H. H. Sheldon. 1910-13; J. \V. W'asburn, 1913-14, and J. Ed. Murr, the present pastor. AN UNIQUE COURTSHIP. Mrs. J. H. Alexander, wife of the oldest physician in Greensburg. is the daughter of Joseph Tarkington. She has preserved her mother's account of her father's very ministerial courtship. It runs as follows: "One Sunday in the spring of 1831, as I was on horseback riding home from John Cottom and Amanda Clark's wedding, he rode up Ijy m\- side and asked me if I had any objections to his company, and I said I did not know as I had. He had been stopping at father's on his rounds of the cir- cuit. It was one of his homes. ^Ir. Tarkington, some time after this, about a month before we were married, as he was starting away on his circuit, handed a letter to mv father, which is as follows: " 'August 30, 1831. " 'Dear Brother and Sister, — You. by this time expect me to say some- thing to you concerning what is going on between your daughter and myself. You will, I hope, pardon me for not saying something to you before I ever named anything to her, though she is of age. Notwithstanding all this, I never intended to have any girl whose parents are opposed. Therefore, if you ha\'e any objections, I wish yon to enter them shortly. I know that it will be hard for you to give up your daughter to go with me; for I am bound to travel as long as I can, and of course, any person going with me must not think to stay with mother and father. " 'Yours very respectfully, " 'J. Tarkington.' ■ "Father thought that there would be so many dangers, with suffering and poverty, in being a minister's wife, that it was a very serious matter, and though he was a man of very few words, he told me as much, while he appeared to be very gravely aft'ected. But he wrote a note and gave it to him when he came around next time, which is as follows : " 'September 4. 1831. " 'Reverend Sir: — You express a wish to know if I have any objections to you forming an afifinity with my daughter Maria, to which I would reply : If you and my daughter are fully reconciled to the above proposition, which DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 2ig I have no reason to doubt, I do hereby assent to the same; nevertheless, if such a union should take place, it would be very desirable, if you should settle down here, that you would not be too remote from us. " 'Yours most respectfully, " 'S. AND M. Slauson. " 'Pleasant township, " 'Switzerland county, Indiana.' " But before the Reverend Joseph rode home with the fair Maria from the wedding, he had a disagreealjle duty to perform. In accordance with Methodist discipline, he could not speak of love or matrimony until he had "consulted his brethren." He hastened to see his presiding elder and. with- out disclosing his secret, said : "I am thinking of- getting married before next conference." The elder replied, coldly, "I reckon you are old enough, if you ever intend to," and the interview ended. Shortly, after he had "con- sulted" the presiding elder, the ride referred to occurred. For many years the Reverend Tarkington rode circuits all over Indiana. When superannuated he came to Greensburg to spend the remainder of his life. He died in 1891, two years after the death of his wife. He was born in Nashville, Tennessee, in 1800, and gave practically his entire life tij the service of the church. EARLY MINLSTERI.VL EXPERIENCES. Rev. Joseph Tarkington, in his autobiography, writes of his early expe- riences in Greensburg as follows : "The fall of 1833 conference was held at Madison, and I was sent to the Greensburg circuit. When we came to Greensburg things appeared dis- couraging. The town had been visited by typhoid fever and many had died — Doctor Teal, George Robinson, Mrs. Silas Stewart and others. There had been no religious services for some time. There was no Methodist church. I preached in private houses, and in David Gageby's cabinet shop, where the Rogers house now is, on the northwest corner of the public square. I went to work visiting the sick and praying for them. It was a long time before Silas Stewart got restored from his sickness to health of body and mind. Until he got to walking about he thought he owned the town. "The church members were collected together and had prayer meet- ings in pri\ate houses, such as Freeman's. Rozell's, Stewart's, and sometimes in the old CDurt house. Preaching was had in the old court house, but it was 220 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. a hard house to preach in. In the spring I gut hfteen dollars from Silas Stewart, five dollars from Jacob Stewart and five dollars from James Rob- inson and bought the lot that Mr. F. Dowden owned on Franklin street, and built the house that is now on the lot. "The Greensburg circuit was cut out of the Rush\ille circuit in i8jS. In 1833 it had appointments at Greensburg, Robbins', Burke's. W. Braden's, Cox's, George Miller's, Biggott's, Gray's, Sharpe's, T. Perry's and also at Burney's, south of where Milford now is. "We lived in a little frame house which stood where S. Br^-ant built on Franklin street. There the IMethodists, Presbyterians and Baptists had one place of worship. David Gageby was chorister for all alike. The Presby- terian preacher was Rev. Lowrey, the Baptist was Rev. Daniel Stogsdell. and we would all meet together. One would preach, another e.xhort and the third ]iray. There was no complaint of large meetings, although some per- sons would come from eight to ten miles to attend." AFRICAN METHODIST CHURCH. There have never been many colored people in Greensburg, and at the present tmie (1915) there are only ten families. In the latter part of the seventies the colored people established a Methodist class and held meetings at private homes and in rented rooms. At one time they held services in a room at the southwest corner of the public square. About 1880 they built a frame house of worship at tlie corner of Lincoln and North streets, and this has remained their chiu'ch home since that time. The church records are not available, but it is known that the following ministers have served the church: Jasper Siler, igo6-o8; C. P. Smith, 1908-10: Clayton A. D. Evans, igio-ii (died before the end of his first year and his wife filled out his year): ]\Irs. Clayton A. D. Evans, 1911-12; \\'. T. Anderson, 1912-13: William Kelly, 1913-14: T. W. Daniels, 1914 to the present time. The trus- tees of the church are Samuel T. Evans. Adolphus Frazier and \\\ S. Meadows. The stewards are Mrs. Irene Hood. W. S. Meadows and Adol- ]5hus Frazier. The president of the Mite Missionary S54 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIAKA. Dver Aloore were later elders in this church. A frame cluirch was built in 1852 at a cost of eighteen hundred dollars. With the passing years the church gradually grew weaker and on February 22, 191 5, sold their building to the newly organized United Brethren congregation. At that time there were onlv eight memljers left. SPRING HILL UNITED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. The Spring Hill United Presbyterian church is the only one of this denomination in Decatur county and dates back to the early twenties. It was not known by this name when it was organized in this county in 1825. the present name n(_)t coming into general use until ]May 26, 1858. It was formed by the union of the Associate Presbyterian (or Seceder church) with the Associate Reformed Presbyterian church at the City of Pittsburgh on the date above mentioned. This denomination differs from other Pres- byterian churches in that their songs of praise to God in pul)Iic and pri\ate worship are the psalms, hymns and spiritual songs, dictated Ijy the spirit of God, known in the Bible as the Book of Psalms. When this branch of Presbyterianism was organized at Spring Hill the church was named New Zion, in honor of the congregation in Lexington, Kentucky, from whence many of the first members came. Their old church in Kentucky was known as Zion and by prefixing New to their church in Decatur county thev felt that thc\" were honoring their old church. This name was retained until 1872 when it was thought advisable to chani^e it to Spring Hill. The first preaching which the infant society enjoyed was in 182 1 or 1822, when an associate minister. Reverend Armstrong, stopped over for a day while making an overland trip from Illinois to Ohio. The next preach- ing was 1)\' Rev. Alexander Porter, then pastor of the Hopewell church, in Preble county, Ohio. Among other ministers who preached to the few mem- bers of the church pre\-ious to its formal organization in 1825 were Revs. John Steel, Hugh Mayne, John Reynolds and S. P. Alagaw. The church began its career as an independent congregation on Jul}' 30, 1825, when it was established by a committee representing the First presbytery of Ohio. Tiiis delegation was composed of Rev. David AIcDill. Sr., Elders John Foster and William Caldwell, and Thomas FIenr\'. Sr., who had recently settled near Spring Hill. At this first meeting William Hood and Nathaniel F'atton, Sr., having Ijeen pre\iousIy elected elders, were ordained to the ministry. Jijhn 1^. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIAXA. 255 Mitchell and his wife, Peggy, who were received on certificate, were the first memhers of New Zion church. The first memljers received on examina- tion were William Henderson and his wife, Martha, and Nathaniel Lewis. When the first communion was celelirated, in 1827, hy Rev. Joseph Clay- baugh, the church had a membership of forty. The first church building was of hewed logs, was thirty feet square, and was thrown up in the fall and winter of 1824. James McCracken and Adam and Andrew Rankin ]irepared the logs and these men, assisted by Janies R. Patton and William Anderson, "carried up the corners." The house was not co\ered until the summer of 1825, at which time a roof of poles and split shingles was tied on with that skill which our good fore- fathers hajipily possessed. The shingles were rived on the farm of Samuel Lewis, near Clarksburg. The roof was -put on under the direction of Will- iam Penny. The seats were such as those occupying them chose to make, everyone supplying their own, some better and some worse. On these seats the patient worshippers could and ank Talmage occupied the pulpit. In 1874 and 1876 Ivnowles Shane and Alfred Elmore held two very successful re\ivals and the membership of the church rose past the two hundred mark. A few years later interest began to wane and finally in 1884 the church was abandoned. The old church, which the early members had Iniilt with clumsy axes, was neglected and at last torn down. ADAMS CHRISTIAN CHURCH. The Christian church at Adaius was organized by Jacob Wright in 1859, with the following charter members: William, Sarah and Elizabeth Colwell, Mary Woodward, Joseph and Martha Pleak, Willet and Nancy Stark, Jane Johnson, Mary. Clara, William, Parish, Lavina and Belle Aldrich, Phoebe and Ephraim Wagner, Thomas Whitaker, Martha Inman. Charley Aloor, Elizabeth Bennet, Thomas Johnson and Eliza Pearce. Until 1 87 J the congregation met in dwellings and in the old school house. In that year a comfortable brick building was erected, which is still in use. The church now has seventy members. Ministers during the past two decades have been : C. L. Riley, I. B. Grisso, G. H. Brewer, C. G. Can- trell, H. B. Sherman, D. R. A'an Buskirk, S. J. Tomlinson, H. M. Hall, C. S. Johnson, W. T. McGowan and D. T. Thornton. 264 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. WAYNESCUKG CHRISTIAN CHURCH. Elder William Patterson is supposed to have been the hrst minister for the W'aynesburg church, which was probably founded in 1855. The church occupied a small building until 1877, in which year a better building was erected. This building was struck by lightning and burned in 1898. Since that time another structure has been erected on the same site. The church has a membership of eighty. Among its recent pastors are John A. Camp- bell, W. M. Gard, Alphonso Burns, Z. AI. Kenady and Henry Ashley. NEWPOINT CHRISTIAN CHURCH. James Young of Kentucky organized the Newpoint church in the winter of 1862 in the old school house at that place. For a time the church flourished and then lapsed into inacti\'ity for about seven years. Then interest in the church was again aroused and a new building was erected. This edifice was dedicated on Christmas Day, 1870, and a revival followed, which resulted in ninety-nine additions to the church. Some of the active members at that time were Eph W'agoner and wife. Thomas Brown and wife, W. E. Barkley and wife; Elizabeth Barkley, Mrs. M. E. Main, William Higdon and wife; Airs. J. L. Hilliard, Joel Pennington and wife; Mrs. Thomas Hart,. Mrs. Samuel Thomas. Mrs. Rosetta Starks and Mrs. Phillip Lawrence. The church udw has mure than one hundred members and has a good Sunday school. The following Butler College men have occupied the pulpit there: S. R. Wilson, M. T. HofY, J. H. Gavin and C. Goodnight. In 1912 Rev. William Chappie, of Columbus, conducted a revival which added thirty- eight to the church, the second largest number received in its history. ST. PAUL CHRISTIAN CHURCH. Although the youngest church of the denomination in the county, the St. Paul Christian church is one of the most active and ranks second numer- ically. It was organized on March 2, 1874, at the Union church, with sixty- one charter mem])ers. Milton Copeland, James Eishback and ^\'illiam Hann were ordained as elders and A. H. Tlrompson, W. H. Walters. O. J. Grubb, Henry Lefller, James Hanger, C. A. Pearse, M. A. Leffler and L. A. \"an Scyoc were ordained as deacons. Ten }-ears later the church building was surrendered to the Lutherans, the Christian congregation taking the seats and fixtures. Services and Sun- DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 265 day school were held for a time in the school house and then the congre- gation disbanded for lack of a meeting-place. In 1888 the church was reorganized and the congregation rented the former meeting-place. In 1893 this building was purchased outright from the Lutherans. Two years later the old church was rebuilt and was dedi- cated with appropriate ceremonies on August 25, 1895. Since its organization the church has received more than four hundred persons into membership and now has a congregation of two hundred. It has an excellent Sunday school and a flourishing Ladies' Aid Society. Following are ministers who have been regularly installed by the con- gregation of this church : N. A. Walker, Isaac Tomlinson. Charles Salis- bury, ^^'alter S. Smith. Charles Riley, Z. M. Kenady, V. G. Carmichael, Alphonso Burns, Cloyd Goodnight, James Conner, J. L. Roberts, Perry Case, E. W. Stairs, R. H. Webb, A. Burns, Clarence Reidenbach, Stanley Selleck and George E. Beatty. The latter took charge of the church in February, 1914, but was compelled to resign in December of the same year, on account of ill health. The Sunday school, under the superintendency of Ora Pearce, has an average attendance of forty-five. Mrs. Courtney Kanouse is president of the Ladies" Aid Society. DISCONTINUED CHRISTIAN CHURCHES. Four churches of this denomination, founded in Decatur county during the past four decades, have passed out of existence. Antioch church, founded by John B. New in 1840, disbanded in 1875. Union Chapel, ten miles south of Greensburg, went down in 1880 after an existence of thirty years. A church started at Mechanicsburg in 1865 lasted fifteen years. The Clifty church, founded about 1840, ended its career in 1875. UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST. The United Brethren in Christ came into existence at Lancaster, Penn- sylvania, in the year Washington was inaugurated President. In that year William Otterbein and Martin Boehm, German nunisters of the Reformed and Mennonite churches, respectively, first used the term United Brethren in Christ and the church may be said to have started that year. In this event- ful year there was a great religious awakening in Pennsylvania and large union services were held at various places. One night, in the barn of one Thomas Newcomer, in Lancaster, Martin Boehm preached a powerful 266 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. sermon aiifl, as soon as he was through. William Otterbein, who had never heard him preach before, and, in fact, had never seen him before this par- ticular night, walked up to him and greeted him thus : "W'e ought to be 'United Brethren in Christ," for the doctrine which you have just preached is also my firm belief." Thus did the church come into existence. The first annual conference was held in 1800 and from that day forward the church has enjoyed a steady growth. The stronghold of the church is in the state of Ohio. There are five churches of the denomination in Decatur county at the present time : St. Omer, l*"redonia, Alapleton, Lower Union and Sardinia. FREDONIA CHURCH. The Fredonia church is located a mile and a half south of Westport and dates its beginning from the earl_\- forties. The early records of the church are not available, but from one of the oldest residents of the com- munity the following facts have been gleaned. Felix Boicourt and his two children, Catherine and Absalom, started the church and for many years the meetings were held in their home. A school house later was used until such a time as the little congregation was able to liuild a log church. Later a frame house of worship was erected, which, with improvements from time to time, is still in use. H. W. White is the present pastor and has a flour- ishing congregation of one hundretl and thirty members. The Sunday school, under the superintendency of R. E. Mattix, has an average attend- ance of forty. Mrs. Elsie JMattix is president of the Christian Endeavor; Mrs. Iveuben Ford is at the head of the Ladies' Aid Society, while Mrs. H. W. White is the directing spirit of the Woman's Missionary Society. MAPLETON CHURCH. The Mapleton United Brethren church, which dates from about 1850, is situated two and a half miles northeast of Westport. The Boicourt family — David Boicourt and wife and George Boicourt and wife — were chapter members. Like its sister church at Fredonia, it first worshipped in private homes until such a time as it was in a position to erect a separate house of worship, b'or many years the church was locally known as the Horse Shoe Bend church. The present pastor is H. W. White. The heads of the differ- ent auxiliaries of the church are as follow: Sunday school, L. E. Jessup; Ladies' Aid Society, ]Mrs. Emma Skinner. There are now one hundred and ten active members. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 26/ LOWER UNION CHURCH. The United Brethren church known as Lower Union is located alwut three and three- fourths miles southeast of Westport. The congregation existed for many years before the present church was erected, in 1862, and had for some time worshipped in a log liuilding across the road from the present church. The church of 1862 was built by the united efforts of the Baptists and United Brethren, and probably other denominations, and is still a union church. The two denominations use it alternately and both ha\'e their separate Sunda}^ schools. The only auxiliary organization main- tained ijy the United Brethren is the Sunday school, which, under the lead- ership of Elmer Smith, is doing good work with the fort}' who attend regu- larly. Rev. H. W. White is the pastor. SARDINIA CHURCH. The United Brethren church at SarcHnia is less than a year old, being organized November 19, 1914, and owes its existence to the faithful efforts of Rev. S. S. Turley, who established it and still remains as its pastor. Dur- ing the winter of 1914-15 lie held a revival in Sardinia and when he proposed the establishment of a United Brethren church he found sixty-two people who were ready to become charter members. Among the charter members were John and Goldie Gross, Mrs. Lizzie Ammerman, Mrs. Bertha Von- blaricum and I\lrs. Jennie Foist. On February 22, 191 5, the congregation bought the Presbyterian church and are now expending five hundred dollars in improving it, the original cost being two hundred dollars. Services are held by the pastor every Sunday evening and a mid-week prayer meeting has been attended with most gratifying results. The class leader is Thomas Talkington; James Cann is superintendent of the Sunday school; Miss E. Rose Meredith is president of the Christian Endeavor Union. Reverend White also serves charges at Grammer and Mt. Calvary in Bartholomew county. PENTECOST CHUCH, GREENSBURG. In 1902 Greensburg was visited by several persons of the Pentecost faith. They were unable to hnd a place of worship according to their own faith, and held services in an old house on East North street. These meet- ings were well attended and the house in which they were holding their serv- ices at that time did not furnish ample room to accommodate the worship- 268 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. pers. George Little, seeing the disadvantage under wiiich tliey labored, came forward with this proposition: That if fifty of the members would con- tribute five cents per week, making a guarantee of ten dollars per month, he would provide them with a house of worship. In addition to this, a contract must be made to keep the house for three years, at which time he would turn it over to them as the rent for this length of time would \)ay for the building. Mr. Littell also agreed to donate the lot and give one hundred dollars in cash on the completion of such building. This proposition was immediately accepted and Mr. Littell began mak- ing plans for their house of worship. He purchased the old Antioch church, located on the Madison road, from Alexander Hillis, who had been one of the deacons in that church. Mr. Hillis asked permission to keep the old church Bible. Mr. Littell immediately complied with this recjuest and asked Mr. Hillis to bring it to the dedication of the new church and also give some public utterance at the services, all of which he did. The old church building, which was in a good state of preservation, was moved to a beautiful lot in the eastern part of Greensburg and fitted up for services. But before the building had reached completion there arose a turmoil among the Pentecost brothers and the)' failed to comply with their part of the agreement. Consequently, Mr. Littell was left with the house of worship on his hands, as no one came to worship. This state of affairs lasted until April lo, 1902, when it was dedicated by a Mr. Mounts under the Pentecost leadership. This lasted for some time and finally the interest began to wane. This church at present is the property of the trustees of the Second Christians, but the historian, with his present knowledge of theology, is unable to distinguish this faith. The services are now conducted by Rev. Jacob Cruiser. GERMAN LUTHER.\N CHURCH. German Lutherans held services for a time in the cit_\- hall, Greensburg, lieginning aljout 1870, but never mustered sufficient strength to erect a church of their own. Never more than twenty families attended the serv- ices, which were discontinued after a few years. One of the ministers who preached to this congregation was Karl Jacobs. EPISCOPAL CHURCH. For thirteen years (1898-1911) Episcopalians held regular services in their own church in Greensburg, and then the denomination, weakened by DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 269 the death of a prominent member, closed the doors of the huiUHng, which is still stantling on Hendricks street. For two years prior to the erection of the church in 1900 services were held in the city hall. When the church was erected there were twenty-one persons in the parish. The following rectors, among others, conducted services in Greensburg until the church was closed in 1911 : Revs. W^illis D. Engle, John Nead}-. James \V. Com- fort and George Gallup. CHURCH OF GOD. There is another abandoned church in Greensburg and it stands at West North and Anderson streets. It is the Church of God and was built in 1887, following a wonderful revival and evangelistic service held in the opera house by Mrs. Maria Woodworth, evangelist of the cult. Mammoth crowds attended the services. People went into trances and walked the floor in a frenzy or seemingly lost consciousness and became stiff and rigid. The utmost excitement prevailed. Before conducting services in Greensburg', Mrs. ^^'oodworth had preached at ]\[uncie, Indiana, with simi- lar results. Following the meeting in the opera house, a church was organized and meetings were held for a time in a tent. Then the church building was erected, at a cost of about one thousand dollars. Then interest in the move- ment seemed to die, and, save only when Mrs. Woodworth made periodical visits to the city, the attendance was very small. At last the doors were locked and the church stands empty, vacant reminder of an emotional storm that once shook a city. CHRISTIAN (new LIGHT) CHURCH. While there have been many members of the New Light division of the Christian church, there has been, as far as has been discovered, only one church built by this denomination. Strictly speaking, it was erected by one man of the denomination. Several }'ears before the Cix'il War, a Ken- tuckian by the name of Jacob Sidner, a stanch member of the New Lights, built on one corner of his farm a substantial brick house of worship for his church. It was in Washington township on the Moscow road, about two and a half miles northwest of Greenslnirg. The building, which was later used for a school house, is still standing, a tril)ute to the religious zeal of this one man. Before he built his church, Sidner used to send to Kentucky once a year for the best New Light pfeacher he could get and have him conduct a 270 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. sort of a camp meeting in a grove near his home in Washington township. He prepared seats in the grove, paid all the expenses and reveled in one good New Light service annually. Eventually, he felt justified in erecting a church for his people, but there does not appear to have been a very flourishing con- gregation at any time during its career. Who the preachers were, who the members were, or the date when the church was abandoned have been lost in the flight of time. The only person who has a definite recollection of the man and his church is the Rev. J. B. Lathrop, of Greensburg, who gave the above facts. GERMAN METHODI.ST EPISCOPAL CHURCH. The only German Methodist church in Decatur county is located in Salt Creek townshii), a mile and a half south of Smith's Crossing. The church dates its beginning from the time the first Germans of this denomi- nation located in this part of the county. They worshipped in private houses and school houses for a time and in 1864-65 Iniilt the church, which is still in use. In the summer of 1915 extensive improvements were made in the way of new roof and painting on the exterior and redecorating the interior. Sunday school is maintained and regular preaching services are held every two weeks by the pastor. Rev. William Wiegen, of Batesville. A well-kept cemeterv adjoins the church. GERMAN LUTHERAN CHURCH. The German Lutherans have one congregation in the county. This is situated in Salt Creek township, two miles west of New Pennington and only one mile south of the one German Methodist church in the county. This church, known as St. I^aul's, was established shortly before the opening of the Civil War and the present building was erected in 1861. The pastor in 191 5 is Rev. William Schirmer, who lives in the parsonage adjoining the church. THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY OF GREENSBURG. The beginning of all societies and churches of the Christian Science denomination may often be traced to some knowledge of the healing of ills "that flesh is heir to." The Christian Science Society of Greensburg, Indiana, is not an ex- ception to this nile. Mrs. i\Iary J. G. Griswold and Edith S. Griswold, mother DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 27I and daughter, are the first known people in the CDunty seat to benefit by Christian Science treatment. As a resuU they opened their home, at No. 128 West Hendricks street, for services in 1902. In 191 1, lo3-al students of Indianapohs and Chicago presented the httle band with a pubhc meeting place in the WoodfiU building, at the northwest corner of the public square, maintaining the gift for a period of twelve months. Services are still held in this building on every Sunday morning and W'ednesday evening. The Sunday services of this denomination, the world over, are con- ducted by a first and second reader, who read the same lesson-sermon from the Christian Science quarterl}' Bible lessons, prepared by an authorized com- mittee of the mother church, the First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts. The scriptural texts are from the King James" version; their correlative passages are from the denominational text-book "Science and Health, With Key to the Scriptures," by Mrs. Mary Baker G. Eddy, dis- coverer and founder of Christian Science. The reading for the Wednesday evening meetings is from these two books, which are the only preachers of the denomination. This is followed with testimonies, experiences, and remarks on Christian Science. The democratic form of government obtains in the society, the majority rule being recognized. The customary reading room is open in Greensburg on Tuesday and on Saturday afternoon of each week. The present membership of the Greensburg Christian Science Society numbers twelve. UNITED BRETHREN. The first United Brethren preaching in the county was at the house of John Khorer, who came from Clermont county, Ohio, in 1824, and settled on the banks of Clifty. Ivhorer was one of the wealthiest citizens in the county and built one of the most elegant houses in this part of the state. His house was open to all preachers for many years, and here was organ- ized the first United Brethren class, some time before the forties. About 1840 a frame house of worship was built on Khorer's farm in Jackson township. There were three so-called "war churches"' built in Jackson township during the war, which were to eschew all mention of politics, and, so some said, they not only had no politics, but also no religion. Be that as it may, they died soon after the war closed. They were strictly a war by-product and, with the struggle over, there was no further excuse for their existence. 272 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. J. A. Dillman, in the Standard of Ma_v 28, 1897, says of these three churches, "One has stood idle for many years, another was sold for a barn, and the third, after many changes, is still used as a church house." CATHOLIC CHURCHES IN DECATUR COUNTY. Greensburg Catholics, few in number before the Civil W'nv, held servi- ces for a number of years in resiflences of members of that denomination. In 1855 Father E. Martinovic, who hatl charge of the mission, erected a small brick church and Rev. . John Gilling became the first resident priest, ministering to the parish from 1863 to 1871. He was succeeded by Rev. John L. Brassard, who remained for a year or more. Then, save for an occasional mass, celebrated by a visiting priest, the parish was without guidance until 1874, in which year Rev. Daniel Curran came. .\t this time there were no more than twenty-five families residing in the parish. The coming of Rev. Father Curran marked the beginning of a new epoch in the history of St. Mary's. During his three years of ministration in Greensburg, he l)uilt a new parish house, a parochial school with room for a hundred pupils and a teachers' residence. His iiealth broke under the arduous laljor and he was compelled to give up his work, dying a short time afterward. Rev. Henry Kessing was placed in charge in 1877 and remained until his death in 1882, l:)y which time there were about seventy- five families in the parish, which was fast outgrowing the old brick church. Then came Rev. George Steigerwald, at that time one of the ablest men in the diocese. He took charge in 1883 and at once laid plans for the present church, which was completed a short time later at a cost of thirty-five thousand dollars. Rev. George Steigerwald was a graduate of Fleidelberg University and besides his scholarly attainments possessed imusual personal endowments. He was genial and afi^alile in his relations with those outside his church and did much to break down prejudices existent before his coming. Upon his departure in 1897, he presented the parish with the present parish home, his personal property. For the next se\enteen vears Rev. Fawrence bichter was in charge of St. Mary's parish. This was a period of unusual growth, as Reverend Fichter induced a large number of substantial German Catholic families to settle in the vicinity of Greensburg. The present priest. Rev. Father Fein, came to St. Mary's in 1913, from St. Josejjh's parish in \'ander])urg county. He has placed a new organ in I ST. .MAI ItlCKS C.VITIDI.K (111 lull. ST. OMIOU r. I!. IIUKCII. ADAMS TOWNSHIP. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 273 the church and plans the erection of a fifteen thousand-dollar parochial school. The present parish membership is more than eight hundred. ST. MAURICES PARISH. The \-illage of St. ^Maurice was laid out in 1S58 and was named in honor of Bishop Maurice De St. Oakaus. The Christian Brothers started a school the same year; but upon the death of their leader, Brother John Mary Weitnian, the teachers returned to France. The Brothers had laid out the town upon forty acres of ground, of which nine and thirty-five hun- dredths acres belonged to the parish. A chapel was built in connection with the schoi^l which later served as a church for the parish. It was a frame structure, later converted into a school building, and is now a residence, owned by Frank Nienaber. Among the first settlers in the village were : Martin Mauer, Stephan Brigler, Leonard Hemmerle, Magdalena Hemmerle, Herman Schroeder, John Altenan, Henry Oesterling, Edward Hellmich, Henr}' Groene and Henry Hopster. The first mass was celebrated at St. Maurice by the Franciscan priest from Enochsburg. There were at that time sixteen families in the parish. The ten acres of ground and the first Imilding cost the Brothers two thousand dollars. They raised one thousand dollars and borrowed the remainder. The first resident priest was Rev. Ferdinand Hundt, who was appointed in 1884. He was succeeded, in 1886, by Rew Francis X. Seegmuller, who re- mained until 1891, when Rev. John B. Unverzagt took charge of the parish. The present church was built in 1881-82 at a cost of ten thousand dol- lars. The interior was remodeled and redecorated in 1912, during the pas- torate of the Rev. Michael Wagner. St. ^Maurice is justly proud of its beautiful church. The rectory was built in 1S55, at a cost of two thousand two hundred dollars, and the present school building, which cost appro.xi- mately four thousand dollars, in addition to donated labor, was erected in 1907. Since the departure of the Rev. Father Unverzagt the following clergy- men have had charge of the parish. Rev. Charles Schoeppner, O. F. M. ; Rev. Alexander Koesters, Rev. Michael Wagner and the present pastor. Rev. Herman J. Gadlage. The church now has an enrollment of sixty-five fami- lies and an enrollment of three hundred and twenty-five souls. The parish societies are the following: St. Martin's Men's Society; St. fi8) 274 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Aloysius's Young Men's Society; St. Elizabeth's ^ilarried Ladies' Society | and the Bles.sed Virgin Mary's Young Ladies' Society. OLDEST PARISH IN COUNTY. The church of the Immaculate Conception, at Millhousen, Rev. J. P. Gillig, pastor, was the first Catholic parish organized in the county of Decatur. On June 20. 1840, Maximilian Schneider donated forty acres of land, in trust, to Rt. Rev. Celestine de la Hailandiere, bishop of Vincennes, for the benefit of the Catholics of Millhousen, and in the same year the congregation, consisting of thirteen families, decided to erect a house of worship. This was a plain log building, twenty by twenty-four feet, with a rough exterior, chinked and daubed with mud, and was constructed under the auspices of Rev. Joseph Ferneding. The Hock was comprised of Germans, and among the foremost of these in promoting the interests of the congregation, as well as of the town, was Bernard Hardebeck. The first missionary priests, fol- lowing blather Ferneding, were Revs. Conrad Schneiderjans, M. O'Rourke and Ramon Weinzoepfel, who labored until 1843. From 1843 i-intil 1854, Rev. Alphonse J^Iunschina and Rev. Joseph Rudolf were the only two labor- ers in this field, and of these Father Rudolf, whose residence was at Olden- burg, performed prodigious labors, visiting Franklin, Dearborn, Ripley and Decatur counties. The increase of Catholics at Millhousen was surprising; wherefore they determined to build, instead of the wooden church, a good-sized brick church, thirty-eight by si.xty feet . This was completed in 1850, and dedicated as St. Boniface's church. As the Rev. Alphonse Munschina, who had charge of the church, resided at St. .Vnn's, in Jennings count}-, it was deemed expedient by the people to have a priest residing in their midst; at their recjuest, Rev. Peter Kreusch built, in 1856, the present parish house, which at the time was the finest in the diocese. In 1857 he erected a large school house and now the congregation has two siilendid l)rick school buildings, the schools being attended by one hundred and seventy pupils. The schools are in charge of the Franciscan Sisters of Oldenburg, assisted by a lay teacher for boys. The erection of the church of the Immaculate Conception, fifty-five by one hundred and forty feet, forty-six and one-half feet in height, was com- menced under Rev. F. Hundt, the ceremonies of laying the corner stone oc- curring on May 24, 1867: and the building was completed under the pastorate of Rev. Dr. Hueser and dedicated on August 4, 1869. In 1893 a spire was built which reaches one hundred and seventv-five feet above the ground. On DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 275 November 7, 1870, Rev. F. W. Pepersack took charge and was succeeded, on July 2, 1885, by Rev. Joseph Schuck, and he, in October, 1891, by the Rev. John P. GilHg. Father Gillig remained with the church until June 15, 1904, when he was succeeded by Rev. J. A. Urich, the present pastor. The con- gregation is now estimated to be at least two hundred and fifty families, or nearly two thousand souls. The great majority of these live in Decatur county, although there are several living in Ripley and Jennings counties. ST. Paul's church at st. paul. St. Paul's church dates its formal organization from September 21, 1858, when twelve Catholic families were given permission to build a church in the village of St. Paul. However, previous to that date services had been held irregularly in the homes of the members of the church. The lot for the new church was donated by John Paul and E. L. P^'loyd, non-Catholics, living in St. Paul. Immediately after permission had jjeeu granted for the erection of a church, steps were taken for the construction of the same and the work was pushed with loyal vigor by the devoted members of the con- gregation. The dedication of the church took place on July 31, 1859, and the same building, with many extensive improvements, is still in use today. Owing to the small number of memljers it has never been able to maintain a resident priest. For several }'ears the church was attached to St. Mary's, at Greensburg, and was served by the pastors from that place. Since 1885 it has been a mission of St. Vincent's at Shelbyville. Among the priests from Greensburg who served St. Paul were Fathers John P. Gillig. J. L. Bras- scart, Daniel Curran, Henry Kessing and George Stiegerwald. The follow- ing priests from Shelby\-ille have ministered to the congregation : Revs. M. L. Guthneck, G. M. Ginnsz, F. Hundt, A. Danenhofer, Charles Strickler, Joseph T. Bauer and F. Ketter, the present pastor. The church now has a membership of seventy. ST. John's at enochsburg. The early history of the Catholic churcli at Enochsburg, a pleasant village on the Decatur-Franklin county line, is rather obscure, although it is known that Father Rudolph was serving a small congregation of Catholics in that neighborhood at as early a date as October, 1844. From accounts handed down, it is known that a log chapel in the woods surrounding Enochs- burg was dedicated by P^ather Rudolph on December 22, 1844. This mission 276 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. was attached to the Oldenburg parish and continued to be served from the Oldenburg church until 1862, in which year Rev. Lawrence Oesterling, a Franciscan priest, became the first resident pastor. In 1853 the parish erected a small stone school building, thirty l)y thirty-five feet in size; shortly there- after beginning the erection of a stone church, which was dedicated in 1856. This church, which is still serving the needs of the parish, was built of dressed gra_\- limestone and is fifty by one hundred and five feet in di- mension, the height of the spire being one hundred and thirty-five feet; three bells being hung in tlie tower. .Since the church was erected numer- ous improvements have been added thereto ; notably during the pastorate of Father Pfeifer (1882-99), who frescoed the church, installed new altars, pur- chased new statues, put a slate roof on the church, installed an organ and made extensive improvements in the grounds surrounding the church prop- erty. In 1868 Rev. Michael Heck succeeded Father Oesterling as pastor, remaining until 1879. During his pastorate a brick residence of eight rooms was erected, and in 1872 he had the satisfaction of dedicating a sub- stantial school building for the children of the parish. He secured the servi- ces of the Venerable Sisters of Oldenburg as teachers and from that time down to the present a flourishing school has been maintained, more than seventy-five children Ijeing enrolled during the current term. In 1879 Father Heck was transferred to St. Wendel's parish, in Posey county, this state, where he spent the rest of his life in faithful ministration, his death occurring in 1899. Following Father Heck, Rev. John Stolz was placed in charge at St. John's, but he remained only a few months. In 1879 Rev. J. W. Kemper was installed as pastor, his service continuing until 1882, in which year Rev. James Pfeifl:'er entered upon his notably successful pastorate, con- tinuing in charge until 1899, when he was transferred to St. W'endel's to fill the vacancy created by the death of Father Heck. Rev. Joseph Haas then was sent to St. John's and for ten years faithfully served that parish; he being succeeded in 1909 by Rev. Henry Verst, who continued in charge until July, 1914, when the present pastor, Rev. Mathias Schmitz, was in- stalled. St. John's parish has a membership of more than three hundred and seventy souls. \\'hile the church usually is associated with Franklin county, it really stands in this county, being on this side of the county line. ■ The parochial residence stands on the Franklin-Decatur line, while the school house stands in Franklin county. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. CATHOLIC CHAPEL OF WESTPORT. 277 Several years ago the Catholics in Westport held services in the build- ing now occupied by Harry Reidenbach as a jewelry store. There were not a sufficient number of Catholics to establish a church, and the bishop granted them permission to establish a chapel where they might worship under the protection of St. Denis, the nearest Catholic church in Jennings count}'. The chapel has now been discontinued many years and the few Catholics in Westport and immediate vicinity are attached to the St. Denis parish. I CHAPTER IX. BENCH AND BAR. The judicial history of Decatur county faUs into two periods, namely, the period of the old constitution, 1822-1853, and the period following. The constitution of 1852 made a marked change in the judiciary of the state and subsequent amendments to the constitution ( 1881 ) and statutory legislation ha\'e made still further changes. Under the Constitution of 1816 the supreme court of Indiana and the president judges were elected by the state Legisla- ture : where as the present Constitution provides for the election of all judges by the people. The old Constitution divided the state into judicial circuits and placed over each circuit what was known as the president judge. At first there were only three circuits for the fifteen counties of the state then in existence. Each county elected two judges, known as associate judges, and these, with the president judge, had jurisdiction over all the civil and criminal business of the respecti\e counties. The president judges, as well as the associate judges, were elected for a term of seven years. The clerk of the common-pleas court was elected for a like term. These judges served both as common-pleas and circuit judges, and, in the case of Decatur county, had charge of most of the probate work, as well. The records disclose only two probate judges, these serving during the decade following 1839. These two probate judges were Angus C. McCoy, 1839-43, and John Thomson, 1843-49. The president judges who held court in Decatur countv- from 1822 to 1853 were as follow: W. W. Wick, B. F. Morris, IMiles C. Eggleston, Samuel Bigger, James Perry, Jehu P. Elliott, George A. Dunn, W'illiam M. McCarty, Reuben D. Logan, Jeremiah M. Wilson, William A. Cullen and Samuel A. Bonner. Associate judges during this period were : Martin Adkins, John Fugit. John Bryson, Zachariah Carton, John Thomson, John Hopkins, Samuel Ellis, Richard C. Talbott and George Cable. Beginning in 1853, there were separate common-pleas and circuit judges until 1873, '" which year the common-pleas court was abolished by the Leg- islature. As near as can be ascertained from the record, the following judges served on the common-pleas bench during these twenty 3'ears : Ro\-al P. I DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 279 Cobb, Samuel A. Bonner, John Davis, David S. Gooding and William A. Moore, the latter of whom was serving when the office was abolished. The jurisdiction of the circuit judges of the district including Decatur countv has been changed a numlier of times by the Legislature and has at various times covered h'ranklin, Henry, Rush, Shelby and Bartholomew counties in the nintli judicial circuit. Since 1899 Decatur lias been united with Bartholomew county fur judicial purposes. The following circuit judges ha\e presided over the district, including Decatur county: William M. j\'Ic- Carty, 1853: R. D. Logan, 1860-65; Jeremiah Wilson, 1865-71; William A. Cullen, 1871-77: Samuel A. Bonner, 1877-89: John W. Study, 1889-93 (Study died in office and his unexpired term was lilled l)y James K. Rwing) ; James K. Ewing, 1893-95; John D. Miller, 1895-98 (died in office) ; David A. Myers, 1898; Douglas Morris, 1898-1901 ; Francis T. Hord, 1901-04; Marshal Hacker, 1904-10: Hugh D. Wickens, 1910-1916. Of the above, Bonner, Study, Ewing. Miller, Myers and Wickens were residents of Decatur count}'. A MYSTERY OF THE OLDEN DAY.S. Considerable mystery lurks about the cause of the death of Judge Martin Adkins, one of the first two associate judges of the county. Adkins died in 1841, at Cincinnati, where he had gone with a drove of hogs. .Vt the time he was under indictment for shooting "Dick" Stewart, his son-in-law, with intent to kill. He had been tried once and the jury disagreed, one juror, it is said, holding out for his acquittal. His emplo}'ees brought home a coffin, which was interred, without Ijeing opened, in the old Mt. Moriah cemetery. This rather peculiar circumstance gave rise to two rumors, one that he had committed suicide in order to evade the ends of justice and the other that his reported death was untrue and that he had left for parts unknown. The exact truth, which might have been in a measure ascertained, by exhuming the coffin, was never known. Enemies of Free Masonry charged at the time the juiy disagreed that Adkins, being a IMason, had been saved from the penitentiary by a member of the organization, who was on the jury. There was at that time no Masonic lodge in Greensburg, Ijut Levi A. McOuithy, who was a juror, was a Mason. John Fugit, the other member of the original court of associate judges, was a nati\e of Virginia. He was tall and thin, with broad shoulders and an eye as bright as an eagle's. When his si.x years on the bench were o\'er he 28o DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. served one or two terms as a justice of the peace in Clay township. He had three sons who attained local eminence. Hngli was an attorne}- at Alilford; James L. was a justice of the peace and later deputy sheriff and Isaac \V. was also an attorney, and served for a time as postmaster at St. Paul, this county. Hopkins, one of the associate judges at the time the office was abolished, was foreman of the first grand jury which convened in the county, was first county treasurer and was a charter meml)er of the Kingston Presbyterian church. His parents wished to prepare him for the ministry, declaring that he was a born theologian. He was a Democrat of the Jackson-Benton school and believed in hard money. He cared little for popularity and had he played politics, might ha\'e reached a high place in the affairs of Indiana. EARLY MURDER TRIALS. One of the most famous murder trials ever held in Decatur county was that of James Wiley, who was convicted in June, 1869, of the murder of Joseph Woodward, and sentenced to life imprisonment. He was pardoned after serving ten years and died soon after his release from the penitentiary. \Yiley killed Woodward in a fight at Milford, in November, 1868, when Republicans were celebrating the election of Grant. Hiram Alley received a two years" sentence for complicity in the crime. Judge George H. Chap- man, of Indianapolis, occupied the bench at the trial. The verdict was returned after an hour's deliljeration. One of the most famous murder trials that e\er came before the Decatur county bench was that of Jacob Block and Elsa Block. Ijrought here from Rush county upon a change of venue. The Blocks, father and son, were Hebrews and were charged with the nnu'iler of Eli Block, a Hebrew merch- ant and a business competitor. The Blocks spent large sums of money in pro- viding for their defense and an imposing array of legal talent was gathered at the Decatur county court house when the case was tried. The case was tried before Judge James C. Hiller, of Indianapolis. Jacob Block, the father, had been previously tried at Rush county and had been found guilty of murder in the first degree, but the higher courts had sustained a motion in error and ordered a new trial. He was represented by Daniel W. Voorhees, while the son was defended by Charles H. Blackburn, a famous Cincinnati criminal lawyer. Both were sentenced to two years in the penitentiary. DICCATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 281 STEPPING-STONE TO CONGRESS. One of the early cases tried in Decatur county courts is related by Oliver H. Smith in a series of articles in the old Indianapolis Juiirnal on "Early Indiana Trials." The case was tried before Associate Judges Fngit and Adkins, in 1823. The case was against a man who had refused to work two days on a school house, as provided by law. James T. Brown defended the man and Mr. Smith appeared for the school commissioner. Brown facetiously raised the point that his client was not ablcbodied, although he was over si.x feet tall and proportionately broad. Judge Fugit ruled thus : "Yes, Mr. Brown, that is the point — you jilead well on that, but it is nothing but the jilea of a lawyer; you admitted that the man who stood before us was your client, and the court will take notice, 'fishio,' as the law books say, that he is an alile-bodied man and no mistake; judgment for two dollars." Smith says that he received his fee of five dollars and always after had Decatur county's undivided support \\\\t\\ he was a candidate for Congress. EARLY BAR HISTORY. When counties in southern Indiana were organized and for many years thereafter, members of the legal profession were few in number, but were usually men of striking personality and great force of character. There were two terms of circuit court a year and lawyers followed the presiding judge on his rounds, taking whatever business came their way. Conseciuently, it is not surprising that when the first meeting of the Decatur county circuit court was held, April 9, 1822, several attorneys were on hand to ask for permission to practice their profession in this court. The old county records show that three lawyers were admitted to the Decatur county bar on this date. They were Thomas Douglass, Joseph A. Hopkins and Seth Tucker. Beyond swearing in a county clerk and the appointment of Joseph Hopkins as prosecuting attorney, the court transacted no business. When the October term began, October 7, two more attorneys sought and received admission to the bar. They were James T. Brown and Charles H. Test. Nothing is known of Douglass, beyond the original entry, showing that the first court held in the county gave him permission to practice his 282 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. profession in Decatur county. Tucker's record has also been lost, but it is presumed that he sulisequently located permanently in some other county. Hopkins, the first prosecuting attorney, soon fell into disrepute and left the county. He was a native of Kentucky and had practiced law there before coming to Indiana. He left the Blue Grass state "under a cloud," and appar- ently did not mend his ways when he settled in the new state. He died in Illinois. He is said to have been a brilliant man and an excellent lawyer. James T. Brown was the first Greensburg lawyer to attain prominence. He was quite eccentric, but possessed a very saving sense of humor. His jokes and anecdotes made him a very interesting character. After practicing in Decatur county for a good many years he located at Lawrenceburg, where he died soon after the war. Brown was a bachelor and lived to a ripe old age. It is said that he was retained in almost every case of importance that was tried during his residence in this county. He was without political ambitions and gave his whole heart to his practice. Andrew Davison, third resident member of the bar, came from Penn- sylvania and was admitted to practice in 1825. He was a learned, technical lawyer ; and it is said that as a pleader, in the professional sense, his superior never appeared at the Decatur county bar. His efforts were brief and direct and delivered in a most forceful manner. Chance played a large part in Davison's selection of Greensburg as a location. He was educated for the ministry, but after his graduation from Franklin College. Pennsylvania, he decided that he would study law. Upon being admitted to the Pennsylvania laar, he departed for a liorseback trip through Ohio, Kentucky and Tennessee, seeking restoration of his health. While upon his return trip his jaded steed dropped, completely exhausted, at Greensburg. Finding a considerable colony of Presbyterians there he cast his lot with them and soon rose to eminence in his profession. Davison was elected a member of the su])reme court in 1852 and was re-elected in 1858. He was defeated for a third term in 1864 and never re- sumed active practice. The only other public office he ever held was the post- mastershi]) at Greensburg, gi\en to him when Andrew Jackson made his famous shake-up in federal postoffices and established a precedent that was folio w'ed by all succeeding Presidents. In 1839 Davison married a daughter of Judge Test. His death occurred in 1871. He was in his day one of the foremost lawyers in the state ; possessed a fine character in public and private life and left a large estate. He left one son, Joseph, who died a few years later. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. OTHER EARLY FIGURES AT THE BAR. Other attorneys who practiced in the Decatur county court in those early days were OHver H. Smith, afterwards United States senator from Indiana, and John Test, who was admitted in 1830. This John Test was the second son of John Test, Sr., w ho represented this district in Congress from 1829 to 1835. Young Test died of tuberculosis in 1839 and his widow some time later married Judge Davison. Martin Jamison, wIkj had studied law under James Brown, was admitted to the bar in 1827. He served in the state Legislature in 1839 and died of lung trouble in 1841. In his short career he built up a very lucrative practice. Following Jamison, Joseph Robison was the next to be admitted to the bar. He was not well versed in legal procedure, and his knowledge of the fundamentals of the law left something to be desired; but as an advocate he stood head and shoulders above the other lawyers of those early days. He was a candidate for Congress on the Whig ticket in 1851, but was defeated l)y John L. Roljinson, the Democratic incumbent. The latter was the father of Joseph Robinson, of Anderson, who represented that district in the Legis- lature for a number of terms. Before his admission to the Ijar, Robinson ser\'ed as sheritT for two terms, during which time he read law. He had Init little education, and when he was married was unable to read and write. He represented Decatur county several times in the state Legislature and was a delegate to the con- stitutional convention of 1850. The next citizen of Decatur county to be admitted to the practice of law was John D. Haynes. a natix'e of New York. He completed a pre\-iouslv begun course of study in the office of Judge Da\'ison, and was admitted to the bar in 1839. He moved to Dearborn county in 1843 ?-"d was later elected judge of the court of common ])leas of Dearborn and Ohio counties. Philander Hamilton and Henry Spottswood Christian located in Greens- burg next. Hamilton gave promise of a brilliant career, but died young and before he had attained the summit of his powers. Christian was a native of Virginia, and claimed relation.ship with some of the first colonial families of that .state. The path of the young law}-er was no more strewn with roses in those days than it is at present, so he <|uit his office for a year to teach in the old seminary and then returned to practice, with better results. He later located at Versailles and died there, of tuberculosis, in 1859. At the first session of the Decatur county court after the adoption of 284 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. the new Constitution, which convened on April 25, 1853, James Gavin, Daniel Patterson and Archibald ]\IcKee were admitted to the bar. Lawyers from other counties, who have had cases in the local court, have frecjuently been admitted to practice upon motion, as a courtesy, and many names appear upon the records of men who ha\e ne\er practiced regu- larlv in the local courts. In 1842 A. A. Hammond was thus admitted on motion. j\Ir. Hammond was later elected lieutenant-governor of the state. Seven lawyers were admitted in 1S44. They were Edward Sanders, S. E. Perkins, who later was elevated to the supreme bench ; Scpiire W. Robinson, Samuel Seabaugh, Silas Overturf, J. S. Scobey and Hugh F. Fugit. PROMINENT FIGURES AT THE BAR. Col. John S. Scobey, one of the most famous members of the Decatur count}' bar, was born near Cincinnati in 181 8, and was educated in the Frank- lin county schools. He was a student for two years at Miami University, cpiitting his collegiate studies to read law in the office of Governor Bebb at Hamilton. Later, intending to practice in Indiana, he left Hamilton and resumed his studies at Brookville, where he was admitted to the bar in 1844. He settled at Greensburg the same year. Scobey was circuit prosecutor from 1847 to 1850, and in 1852 was elected state senator from this county. At the outbreak of the Civil \\'ar. Governor Morton, who was his classmate at ]Miami, telegraphed him to come to Indianapolis at once. As a result of the interview, Scobey returned to Decatur county and raised Company A, of the Sixty-eighth Regiment, Indi- ana Infantry. He performed valorous service throughout the war and his rise was rapid. He soon rose from captain to major and in 1863 became lieutenant-colonel of the Sixty-eighth Regiment. When Colonel King fell at Chickamauga, Scobey was assigned to command of the regiment. Upon his return to civil life he engaged for a time in business affairs, before resuming the practice of law. He was three times a presidential elector. The first time was in 1852, on the Whig ticket; the second time, in 1872, on the Democratic ticket, and again in 1876 on the Democratic ticket. Barton W. W'ilson, who was the next to be admitted to the bar, was a graduate of Indiana University and located in Greensburg in 1848. He was a candidate for the state Senate in 1852, but was defeated by William J. Robinson. His defeat was largely due to his endorsement of the compromise measures of 1850. ^Vilson was a public-spirited man. willing and able at any time to help forward any enterprise which had for its aim the betterment DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 285 of his city. It is said that, throughout his active career, there was no pubHc undertaking that did not draw largely upon his purse and personal services. The first fire engine owned by the city of Greensburg was named for him. Not only was Barton W". Wilson a well-read elementary lawyer, 1)ut he kept well up with the rulings of the courts of his day and was most pains- taking in preparation of his cases. He held many posts of honor in local affairs, for which he was indebted to political foes as well as to the members of his own party. TOOK PART IN THE CIVIL WAR. Col. James Gavin, another leader at the bar in that day, was a man of unusual ability. He had acquired an education, married and was practicing law before he had attained his majority. He taught school in Union county for a time and then moved to Greensburg, where he was admitted to the bar in 1853. I'"^ '^ short time he had built up a large practice. He was born in 1830 and died in 1873. At the outbreak of the war, James Gavin was made adjutant of the Seventh Regiment and when it was reorganized, at the end of its three- months enlistment, he became its lieutenant-colonel. He was given command of this regiment in 1862 and served until the spring of 1863, at which time he resigned on account of a wound received during the second battle of Bull Run. In 1864 he was made colonel of one of the hundred-day regiments sent to Tennessee to relieve the veterans of Sherman's army. Colonel Gavin was originally a Democrat, but was a candidate in i86j for Congress on the Union ticket, being defeated by William S. Holman. After the war he was elected county clerk upon the Republican ticket. He resigned this office to accept an appointment as internal revenue collector, which had been proffered him by President Johnson. He did not secure this office, however, as the Senate refused to confirm the appointment; so he retired from official life and returned to the Democratic party. One of Colonel Gavin's contemporaries was Oscar B. Hord, who later attained national recognition as a legal authority. Hord came from Ken- tucky, a memi)er of a family of lawyers. He was a member of the bar at Maysville, Kentucky, until 1851, in which year he located in Greensburg. He was very young and rather diffident, but the time not needed liy clients he devoted to study and so became one of the most thorough lawyers in Indiana. He associated himself with James Gavin and wrote "Gavin and Hord's Indi- ana Statutes," with full annotations, which was greatly appreciated by the profession in this state. 286 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Hord was elected attorney-general in 1862 and moved to Indianapolis. After his term expired he went into the firm of Hendricks, Hord & Hen- dricks, of Indianapolis, one of the leading law firms of the state. He was one of the most highly trained members of the profession that the Decatur county bar has ever given to the state. Charles F. Parrish and James Coverdill came to Greensburg from Ohio, in 1 85 1, and established the firm of Coverdill & Parrish, which continued for two years, at the end of A\hich time Parrish left the county and Coverdill joined with James Gavin in the formation of a new firm. Parrish won high honors during the Civil War and retired as colonel of the One Hundred and Thirtieth Regiment, Indiana Volunteer Infantry. Coverdill made a poor soldier; quit the service and died in Cincinnati shortly after the war. Gen. Ira G. Gro\er, Decatur county's most illustrious soldier, was born in Union county, Indiana, in 1832. His parents moved to Greensburg and he enjoyed the best educational advantages that could be obtained there, after which he was sent to Asbury Academy, now DePauw University, where he was graduated in 1856, with first honors. Grover taught school until i860, in which year he was elected to the state Legislature, where he served during the regular session and through part of the special session called at the out- break of the Civil War. Having been elected a lieutenant in Company B, Seventh Regiment, Indiana \'olunteer Infantry, he quit his seat in the Legis- lature and served through the war. On the return of the "three-months men," he organized a new company and was chosen its captain. He was with the Seventh in every fight in which it took part, until he was captured during the first day of the Battle of the Wilderness, in May, 1864. General Grover was wounded three times during the war, at Ft. Republic, second Bull Run and in the Wilderness, during which latter engage- ment he was taken prisoner and placed in prison at Cliarlestown, where, with a number of other Union officers, he was placed under fire of their own bat- teries. After some time he was exchanged and after a short visit in Greens- burg, returned to his regiment in time to be mustered out. At the close of the war he held the rank of colonel of the Seventh and was later, for his gallant services, breveted brigadier-general by President Lincoln. Before the outbreak of the war General Grover had studied law and he resumed his studies upon his return to Greensburg. He was admitted to the bar in 1866, but on account of his political activities never engaged in the practice of the legal profession. He was the Republican nominee for Con- gress in 1866, but was defeated by William S. Holman. He was twice elected clerk of the Decatur countv circuit court. Near the close of his second DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 287 term, he showed signs of a mental affliction, due to wounds received in the service, and was placed for care and treatment in a state institution. He died on May 30, 1873. Judge Samuel z\. Bonner, for twelve years judge of the eighth judicial circuit, was born on an Alabama plantation, in 1826. His father abh(jrred slavery and came to Greensburg to educate his children, out of reach of its baneful influence. He was educated at Richland Academy, Miami University and Center College, Danville, Kentucky, from which he was graduated in 1849. For '1 time he read law in the office of Andrew Davison and then entered the Indiana University law school. Upon his graduation, in 1852, Bonner was admitted to the Decatur county bar. He formed a partnership with Barton W. Wilson, which continued until he was elected to the Legisla- ture, in 1854. Two years later he was elected judge of the common-pleas court of Rush and Decatur counties, serving for four years. When he retired from i)ublic life, in 1S60, he formed a partnership with William Cum- back, which lasted until Cumback retired from practice. In 1877 Judge Bonner was called by election to the bench of the circuit court where he served for twelve years. He then became senior partner of the firm of Bonner, Tackett & Bennet, with which he remained until his death, on April 5, IQ04. ENTERED PUBLIC LIFE EARLY. Cortez Ewing, elder brother of James K. Ewing, dean of the Decatur county bar, was born in 1837 and entered public life at the early age of thir- teen ; filling, at that tender stage of his career, the office of deputy clerk and recorder under Henry H. Talbott, prominent office holder of the early days. In 1857 Cortez Ewing was given a position in the general land office at Washington, D. C, under Thomas A. Hendricks, who was then commis- sioner of the general land office. Ewing was admitted to the l)ar in 1858, and began tlie practice of law in i860. For the next two years he was in the office of Ga\'in & Hord, and assisted Hord in his work of revision of the laws of Indiana. He became a partner of Hord, but later entered practice alone. He served, from 1874 to 1878, as trustee of the state institute for the educa- tion of the blind. Later in life he quit the law to become cashier of the Third National Bank of Greensburg. ]\Iuch of the early success of this institution is due to the respect in which Mr. Ewing was held throughout the county. He died in 1887. Judge John D. Miller, who also served upon the bench of the eighth 288 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. judicial circuit, was Ijorn near Clarksburg, this county, in 1840. and thus was one uf the first nati\e-born attorneys to achieve eminence in the legal profession. He entered Hanover College in 1859, but in 1861 left college and enlisted in Company G, Se\-enth Regiment, Indiana N'olunteer Infantrv, and served as a private throughout the Civil War. Uijon the close of the war, he studied law with Overstreet & Hunter, at Franklin, and was admitted to the bar in 1866, after which he mo\'ed to Greensburg. In 1872 he was elected tii the Legislature from Decatur and Rush counties. Prior to his election to the Legislature, he had served Greensburg as city clerk and- city attorney. From 1868 until 1873 he was the law partner of Colonel Gavin. In i8gi Judge Miller, was appointed to. the supreme Ijench of the state to fill a \acancy and served until 18Q3. He was the Repul)lican candidate for the same high office in 1892, but was defeated. He then resumed the practice of law and in 1894 was elected circuit judge. He died on March 20, 1898. ELEVATED TO APPELLATE 'BENCH. Frank E. Gavin, of the tirm of Ga\"in, Gavin & Da\'is, of Indianapolis, is the son of James Gavin and was for many years a leading member of the Decatur county bar. He was born on February 20, 1854, and entered Har- vard College, graduating from that institution with the class of 1873. He studied law with Judge John D. Miller and was admitted to the bar on February 19, 1875, the day before he attained his majority. He served for several years as county attorney and in 1892 was elected judge of the appel- late court. for the second district. LIpon leaving the bench, Judge Gavin formed business associations in Indianapolis and has since continued the practice of law in that city. He was married in 1876 to Ella B. Lathrop, daughter of James B. Lathrop. He is a prominent IMason and was at one time grand master of that order in Indiana. John L. Bracken, who served one term as prosecuting attorney of Decatur county, was admitted to the 1)ar in 1871. For a numljer of years he was associated with M. D. Tackett, in the firm of Bracken & Tackett. In 1878 he was elected circuit prosecutor and served one term. He quit the law some time after and engaged in the monument business at Richmond. Indi- ana, later accepting appointment as deputy revenue collector luider his brother, ^^'illiam H. Bracken, of Brookville. A widow and one son survive him. Marine D. Tackett was born on a Decatur county farm, three and one- half miles from Greensburg, October 26, 1841, and moved to Greensburg DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 289 with liis parents, at the age of ten. After completing his education in the city schools he learned the trade of cabinet maker, which he followed until the beginning of the Civil War, when he enlisted in the Third Indiana Artillery. He saw service with Fremont and Sherman and was mustered out with three years of honorable service to his credit, fie lost an arm by the premature discharge of a cannon, while celebrating the election of Governor Morton. Tackett was admitted to the bar in 1874 and three years later was appointed city attorney of Greensburg, ser\'ing in that office until 1S81, in which year he was appointed prosecuting attorney of the eighth judicial dis- trict b_v Governor Morton, to fill a vacancy caused bv the resignation of Richard i;)urnan, who had succeeded John L. Bracken. He then held the office for four years more by election. He was a member of the state central committee of the Republican party for four years and a delegate to the national convention in Chicago, in 1888; in which year he declined the Republican nomination for Congress". He was chief allotting agent of the Cheyenne and .\rapahoe Indians in 1S91. In iSgj he was elected clerk of the Decatur circuit court and was a candidate for re-election in 1896. Before he became prosecutor he was a member of the firm of Bonner, Tackett & Ben- nett, also had served for a time as postma.ster at Greensburg. .\t the time of his death he was associated w^ith Davison Wilson, under the firm name of Tackett & Wilson. William H. Goddard, who during his time, was Decatur county's lead- ing pension attorney, was born in Clinton township on February 22, 1837. He taught school until 1861. when he was appointed to a clerical position in the department of the interior. Later he was transferred to the treasury department, where he remained until his return to Greensburg, in 1876. While at the national capital he studied law at the Georgetown Law School and was admitted to the ])ar in 1872. At the request of James G. Blaine, he was appointed, in-iSSi, assistant superintendent of the railway mail service, with headquarters at St. Louis. Goddard's legal practice consisted almost entirely of the settlement of pension claims: and, on account of his knowledge of such matters and his personal acquaintance with the business of the pension bureau, he was re- markably successful. During the last ten years of his life he was associated in practice with his son, John F. Goddard. He died on June 21, 1901. John F. Goddard was born on October 22, 1858, in Clay township, this county, and was graduated from Indiana University in 1880. He was admitted to the bar in 1891, but did not commence active practice until 1896. (19) 290 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. In 1905 he formed a law partnership with John \\'. Craig, and the firm of Goddard & Craig is the oldest law firm in Greensburg. John W. Craig was born in Greensburg in 1880, and was graduated from the Indiana Law School before attaining his majorit}-. He ser\-ed as deputy prosecutor before he was twenty-one; had a murder indictment returned, but being too young to be admitted to the bar, was compelled to secure another attorney to handle the case when it came to trial. Judge W. A. Aloore was born on a farm in i'^raiiklin count}-, ,\ugust 16, 1838. When he had completed his preparatory education he entered the office of Judge Bonner and read law there. He was admitted to practice in 1866. The same year he was elected to the state Legislature, where he served one term. In 1870 he was elected common-pleas judge of the twenty- second judicial district and filled the office until it was aliolished by act of the Legislature. In 1876 Judge IMoore was elected to the state Senate upon the Repub- lican ticket and ser\-ed two terms. He then returned to private practice, con- tinuing the same until his death. Davison Wilson, a former prominent member of the Decatur county bar, was born in Greensburg, and was educated in the schools of that city and at Indiana LTniversit}-. He studied law for a time in the office of \\'. B. Wilson and was adnutted to the bar on September 6, 1881. He formed his first legal partnership with Judge David A. Myers, and some time later estab- lished his office with Cortez Ewing: then with M. D. Tackett. Later he engaged in the practice of his profession alone. Wilson was a man of small stature, but a most excellent lawyer. His education gave him a strong foundation for general practice. His speeches were models of brevity and conciseness and his diction was both pure and elegant. For many years he was the one of the leading representatives of the Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chi- cago & St. Louis Railroad Company. He ne\er married. He diefl in 191 1. greensburg's foremost citizen. William Cumback, who, during his luilding, in JNIarch, 1896, now has more than five hundred members and occupies a very important position in the improvement of the municipality. Stock of the institution, subscribed and in force, amounts to $416,700. The par value of each share, when ma- tured, is $100. Interest at the rate of six and one-half per cent, is charged borrowers, and the annual dividend of the association has never been less than six DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 3O3 per cent. The plan of the institution is permanent. Dividends are paid semi- annually, in January and July. According to the latest statement of the association, deposits amount to $182,624.34, and there is a surplus of $5,117.22. The original capitalization of the association was $100,000, but this has since been increased to $500,000. The incorporators were : John F. Childs, H. J. Hamon, Frank E. Gavin. Walter W. Bonner, P. T. Lambert and Charles Zoller, Jr. Upon organization, Mr. Childs was made president, Mr. Gavin, vice-president; Mr. Zoller, secretary; J\Ir. Bonner, treasurer, and P. T. Lambert, solicitor. These officers, with T. H. Stevenson and George P. Shoemaker, comprised the original board of directors. Present officials of the association are: W. C. Woodfill, president; George P. Shoemaker, vice-president; Charles Zoller, secretary; Walter W. Bonner, treasurer, and P. T. Lambert, solicitor. Other members of the pres- ent board of directors are Robert Naegel and Louis Zoller. THE UNION TRUST COMPANY. The Lhiion Trust Compan\' of Greensburg, although one of the young- est, ranks second in amount of deposits among the financial institutions of the county. It secured its charter on Octo1)er 25, 1905, and opened for business on the north side of the [lublic square on January 30, of the following year. Its first officers and directors were as follow: John Christian, presi- dent ; Walter W. Bonner, vice-president ; Harrington Boyd, secretary-treas- urer, James Lathrop, Charles Zoller, Frank R. Robbins, James M. Woodfill, William H. Robbins and Daniel S. Perry. Other incorporators were : John W. Lovett, Sherman Minear, John H. Christian, Charles W. Woodward, John W. Spears, John H. Brown, D. Silberberg, W. Bracken, John H. Picker, Louis E. Lathrop, D. W. Hazelrigg, Morgan L. Miers, Louis Willey, Louis Zoller, George E. Erdman, C. J. Erdman, Abbie A. Bonner, Lizzie A. Ham- ilton, Walter W. Bonner, Isaac Sefton, Calvin Crews, John H. Deniston, J. M. Bright, Max Dalmbert, Oliver Deem, Hart & Woodfill, David A. Myers, Delia McLaughlin, J. M. Covert, B. F. McCoy, Martin Hill, Mary Mc- Laughlin and Blanche McLaughlin. The original capitalizatiDU of the company was $45,000, which has never been increased. Its total deposits, according to its latest statement, were $374,547.62, and its surplus was $33,750. The original stockholders were almost without exception owners of stock in other Greensburg l)anks. who saw the need of a trust compau}- in the city and preferred to organize 304 DECATUR COUXTY, INDIANA. it themselves, rather than jiermit outsiders to do so. Like other organi- zations of this kind the company serves as guardian, trustee and administra- tor; but is not a depository for pubHc funds. It speciahzes in farm mort- gages, its latest statement showing more than $260,000, loaned upon this kind of real estate. Present officers of the institution are: John H. Christian, president; Louis Zoller, vice-president, and Harrington Boyd, secretarv-treasurer. workingmen's building and loan association. The Workingmen's Building and Loan Association, the oldest institution of this character in Decatur county, was founded in April, 1883, bv the following: I. F. Warriner, president; C. \V. Harvey, vice-president; F. P. Monfort, secretary; James E. Mendenhall, solicitor; O. P. Schriver, Tom Brown, Robert Naegel, D. C. Elder, John B. ^Montgomery, Adam Stegmaier and ¥. E. Gavin. Warriner, Harve}-, Brown, bolder, Montgomery and Steg- maier have since died. Founded for the purpose of assisting laboring men, and those working for small salaries, to secure comfortable homes for themselves, the associa- tion has been a strong factor in the development of Greensburg. More than three hundred homes, most of them on the west side of the city, have been erected with money borrowed of this institution. The organization is capitalized at a half milli(jn tlollars and more than $200,000 in stock already has been taken by depositors, looking forward to the time when they should be able to build their own homes. The association has more than two hundred depositors and half as many borrowers. Present officers and directors of the association are : A. C. Rupp, presi- dent; C. P. Corbett, vice-president; David A. Myers, secretary, J. B. Kitchin, Web Woodfill, Daniel S. Perrv, H. L. Wittenberg, Edward Dille, Aueust Goyert, Eugene Rankin and Charles S. Williams. ST. PAUL building ASSOCIATION. The St. Paul Building Association was incorporated on February 13, 1886, and was capitalized for $50,000. It now has ninety-one investing members and fifty-three borrowing members. The amount of capital stock now subscribed and in force is $76,100. Par value of shares is $100. Bor- rowers are charged six and one-half per cent, interest, but no premium is DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 3O5 exaeted. The annual dividend declared in 1914 was six per cent. Total re- ceipts for 1914, from all sources, according to the annual report, were $33,- goS.OJ. Assets, in cash and loans; amounted to the same. Present officers of the association are : C. F. Kappes, president ; George W. Boling, secretary ; Jacob Johannes, treasurer, and Harry Ballard, at- torney. The original incorporators were : J. J. Theobold, Julias Theobold, William Favors. Sarah E. Ellsberry, Abner Buell, J. H. Mason, Delmon L. Lee, George N. V^anostram, John Palmerton, James Ellsberry, Pat Mc- Aulliffe, Peter Johannes, Charles Earner, WiUiam L. Ford, Lewis Hinkle, John Evans, Jacob Johannes, William Favors, Jr., Michael Marren, John W. Jenkins, George Pittman, Maurice Doolan, John Cole, E. L. Floyd, Jonah Phillips, Mort Templeton, Jeremiah Evans, John B. Hohues, J. L. Scanlan, D. W. Avery, J. E. Stevens, Otto Lindner, J. M. Shortridge, Jacob Favors, C. H. Latham, John C. Scanlan, Elias Franks and Calvin Jolly. DECATUR county's ONLY BANK FAILURE. Not one dollar has ever been lost by depositors through failure of a Decatur county jjank. But one institution has ever closed its doors through failure ; and in this instance, stockholders paid off the obligations of the insti- tution within fifteen days. This bank closed its doors on September 2, 1897, and the money was ready with which to pay depositors in full on September 17: the speediest liquidation ever known, according to the declarations of Federal lianking authorities at the time. The laank in question was the First National Bank, which was organ- ized as a private institution in 1857, under the name of the Greensburg Bank. In December, 1863, it was reorganized as a national bank with Antrim R. Forsythe as president. The capital stock was $50,000. This was later increased to $100,000, and then to $150,000. Upon the death of Antrim R. Forsythe, his son, E. R. Forsythe, suc- ceeded him in management of the institution. Not possessing the business acumen of his father, the son permitted the bank to back hazardous enterprises and its affairs became Ijadly ihx'olved. The concern had been Iiarcl hit some years before, through the disastrous failure of Armel & Company, packers, and was in no condition to withstand additional financial drains. Deposits of the institution in 1881 amounted to $205,126.80, according to the annual statement for that year. The last statement of the bank, made on Julv 2^. 1897, showed that deposits had dwindled to $84,000. \\'hen the ■(20) 306 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. bank suspended, four of its directors, as individuals, negotiated loans with the two other banks of Greensburg and paid off the depositors in full. These four directors who lost eighty-fi\'e per cent, of their capital stock, but who felt under obligation to make full and immediate settlements with the insti- tution's dospitors were : Nelson Mowrey, William Hamilton, Robert S. Aleek and Louis Willev. CHAPTER XI SECRET SOCIETIES AND FRATERNITIES. THE MASONIC ORDER. The first secret order to establish itself in Greensburg was the Free and Accepted Masons. Greensburg Lodge No. 36 was instituted here, May 29, 1846, by Grand Master Johnson Watts and and Grand Secretary A. W. Morris. The first officers were : Israel T. Gibson, worshipful master ; Will- iam Buchanan, senior warden; W. W. Riley, junior warden; James Blair, treasurer; Philip Williams, senior deacon; W. P. Stevens, junior deacon; David Gageby, secretary; W. M. Finley, tyler. These, with Thomas E. Peters, were the charter members. At the first meeting, held June 6, 1846, seven petitions were received, as follows ; Philander Hamilton, James M. Talbott, Henry H. Talbott, Chatfield Howell, Joseph Robinson, William J. Likens, and Marine D. Ross. At the end of the first year there were thirty- five members and at the end of 1849 there were seventy-five. The following are the names of the brothers who have served as wor- shipful master and the years they served: Israel T. Gibson, 1846-54; Jacob E. Houser, 1855-57; J- ^^- Bemusdaffer, 1858; Daniel Stewart, 1859-62; John M. Watson, 1861 ; J. J. Menifee, 1863; Col. James Gavin, 1864; Dr. William Bracken, 1865-67, 1869, 1871, 1873-77; Dr. John L. Wooden, 1868; Frank M. Weadon, 1870-72; Frank E. Gavin, 1878-80, 1882,92; J. N. Wallingford, 1881-85; Paschal T. Lambert, 1886-87; Joseph Drake, 1893; John F. Childs, 1894-95; Frank H. Drake, 1896-97; W. P. Skeen, 1898- 1900; W. C. Pulse, 1901, 1912-13; C. T. Pleak, 1902-03; Ira Rigby, 1904: Dr. E. T. Riley, 1905-06, 1908, 191 1; William Bussell, 1907; Bruce Bishop, 1909-10; Locke Bracken, 1914; Robert W. Pierce, 1915. The present officers are: Robert W. Pierce, worshipful master; Ji C. Barbs, senior warden ; T. P. Havens, junior warden ; F. B. McCoy, senior deacon; George Hillman, junior deacon; D. A. Batterton, secretary; Rob- ert C. Woodfill, trea.surer; O. P. Creath, tyler; J. C. Crews, E, E. Doles and L. D. Braden, trusteees. 308 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. The membership numbers two hundred and forty-five and is growing rapidly. The lodge has assets valued at fifteen thousand dollars and con- templates building a temple in the near future. CONCORDIA LODGE NO. 476. Concordia Lodge No. 476 was formed in 1873 Ij}- members from Greensburg Lodge No. 36 and kept up its existence until consolidated with the niDther lodge, on No\ember 5. 1901. The masters of Concordia were as follow: Dr. John L. ^\'ooden, 1873- 80. 1883,1886; Frank AI. Weadon, 1881-82; Dr. J. C. French, 1884; James E. Caskey, 1885 ,1894-95; Cortez Ewing, 1887-89; Dr. J. V. Schofield, 1890; J. T. Cunningham, 1891 ; Dr. W. H. Wooden, 1892-93; Charles T. Powner, 1896-97; David A. Myers, 1898; George B. Von Phul, 1899-1901. There were about one hundred niemliers in this lodge when it united with No. 36. GREENSBURG CHAPTER NO. 8, ROYAI, ARCH MASONS. Greensburg Chapter No. 8, Royal Arch Masons, was instituted on May 23, 1848, by Grand High Priest Abel C. Pepper, assisted by William Hacker, king; I. T. Gibson, scribe, and J. W. Sullivan, secretary. The first convoca- tion was held on July 6, 1848. Charter members were: William Hacker, I. T. Gibson, J. W. Sullivan, Samuel Reed, J. McElroy, Isaac W. Fugit, D. Lindley, J. T. Wilkins and P. Williams. The first petitioners, elected July 6, 1848, were: Philander Hamilton, Jacob C. Houser, George R. Todil, William Hanawa.v, O. P. Gilham, Sanniel Bryant, H. H. Talbott and B. W. Wilson. The designation of the chapter was No. 7 originally, but was changed to No. 8 on June 5, [849. The first officers were: William Hacker, high priest; L T. Gibson, king; J. W. Sullivan, scribe; Samuel Reed, captain of post; J. McElroy, principal sojourner; L W. Fugit, royal arch captain; D. Lindley, master of the first veil; J. T. Wilkinson, master of the second veil; P. Will- iams, master of the third veil; Philander Hamilton, secretary; Daniel Stew- art, guard ; B. W. Wilson, treasurer. The following companions have served as high priest: William Hacker, 1848-49; Jacob E. Houser, 1850-51, 1853; Barton W. Wilson, 1852; Daniel Stewart, 1854, 1860-61; I. T. Gibson, 1855-56; J. V. Bemusdafi'or, 1857-58. 1865-66; Ira G. Grover, 1859, 1871 ; J. J. Monifee, 1862; John L. Wooden, 1867-68, 1870; George L. Curtis, 1869; Isaac L. Fugit. 1872; l->ank M. Weaden. 1873-82; Joseph R. David- DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 3O9 son, 1883; Alexander Connolly, 1884-86, 1890-91; Paschal T. Lambert, 1887-88; Frank E. Gavin, 1889; Joseph Drake, 1892, 1894, 1896-97, 1899- 1902, 1904-05; A. P. Bone, 1895; J. E. Bajless, 1903; William L. Miller, 1906; E. T. Riley, 1907; C. T. Pleak, 1908; Jesse W. Rucker, 1909; John \V. Rhodes, 1910-11 ; Hal T. Kitchin, 1912-14; L. D. Braden, 1915. The chapter has a membership of eight\'-h\'e and is in a flourishing con- dition. Fifteen were added during the first half of 1915. The chapter treas- ury has about se\'en hundred dollars surplus. The present officers of the chapter are: L. D. Braden. high priest; T. B. Havens, king; R. W. Pierce, scrilje; H. T. Kitchin, past scribe; J. H. Christian, captain of host; W. G. Bentley, royal arch captain; C. L Ryan, secretary; Robert Woodfill, treasurer; J. W. Rhodes, master of the third veil ; J. N. .Vnnis, master of the second veil; T. E. Da}', master of the first \eil ; O. P. Creath, guard. GREENSBURG COUNCIL NO. 74, ROYAL AND SELECT MASTERS. Greensburg Council No. 74, Royal and Select Masters, was instituted on August 2Ti, 1902, by John J. Richards, illustrious grand master of the grand council, with Jesse W. Rucker, thrice illustrious master; Fred Erd- mann, deputy thrice illustrious master ; W. H. Wooden, principal conductor of work. The first convocation was on September i, 1902, when the following officers were elected: J. W. Rucker, thrice illustrious master; Fred Erd- mann, deputy thrice illustrious master ; W. H. Wooden, principal conductor of work; J. T. Alexander, treasurer; C. T. Pleak, recorder; C. M. Woodfill, captain of the guard ; A. P. Bone, conductor of the council; D. A. Myers, stewartl. These brethren were elected at the first convocation : J. M. Towler, James W. Craig, J. N. Graham, J. E. Bayless, S. R. Glenn, J. H. Christian. There are fifty-nine members of the council at the present time. Nine have been admitted during the first half of 1915. The present officers are as follows: J. H. Christian, Jr., thrice illustrious master; R. W. Pierce, deputy thrice illustrious master ; T. B. Havens, principal conductor of work ; Robert Woodfill, treasurer; C. I. Ryan, recorder; \\\ C. Bentley, captain of guard ; J. \\'. Rhodes, conductor of the council ; S. F. Ridenour, steward ; J. N. Annis. sentinel. The first thrice illustrious master was Jesse ^^'. Rucker. He held the office until 191 1, when the present incumbent, J. H. Christian, Jr., was elected. 3IO DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. GREENSBURG COMMANDERY NO. 2, KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. It is a matter of pride among Greensljurg ^Masons that there once ex- isted here a commandery of Knights Templar. Greensburg Commandery No. 2 was organized and set to work under a dispensation from ]\lost Eminent Wilham R. Hubbard, grand master of the United States, on March 25, 1 85 1. The charter members were: James Mcllroy, WilHam Hacker, W. F. Pidgeon, Wilham Crawford, George Hibben, Jacob E. Houser, M. V. Simin- son, John W. Sullivan, Homer T. Hinman, Burriss Moore and John S. Sco- bey. A charter was issued on September 19, 1853. The eminent comman- ders were: Jacob E. Houser, 185 1 to 1836; J. V. Eemusdaffer acted as eminent commander between this time and i860, but there is no record of his election; Israel T. Gibson, i860. The other officers elected at the last election held June 30, i860, were B. W. Wilson, captain general; J. V. Be- musdaffer. generalissimo; J. E. Houser, prelate. There is no record of any meetings after i860. Sixty-six members were enrolled during the ten years the commandery was in operation. The Civil War called many of the mem- bers to the service of their country, causing interest to decline, until the following knights petitioned Grand Commander William Hacker to transfer the commandery to Shelbyville : Thomas Pattison, W^illiam Allen, Jacob Vernon, T. H. Lynch, Daniel Stewart, B. W. Wilson, James Gavin, Putnam Ewing, J. V. Bemusdaffer, Will Cumback, James Elliott, Robert Cones and John Elliott. The commandery was reorganized at Shelbyville on March 18, 1865, as Baldwin Commandery No. 2. Greensburg Commandery was the second formed in Indiana and par- ticipated in the first grand commandery at Indianapolis, May 16, 1854. It then had thirty-four members: Indianapolis No. i had fifty-three; Lafayette No. 3, forty-six, and Fort Wayne No. 4, fifteen. \\'ith the prosperous con- dition of all branches of the order at the present time, Greensburg Masons are looking forward to the no-distant future when they shall have a new temple and again have a commandery. Among the early memliers of the craft who contril)uted to the establish- ing of the order here perhaps none wrought so effectively as I. T. Gibson, a prominent merchant and father of Mrs. Dr. E. B. Swem. Others who ably assisted were Jacob E. Houser, H. H. Talbott, J. Monroe Talbott, Samuel Bryan, B. W. Wilson, Daniel Stewart, Daniel Moss, J. V. Bemusdafifer, and Isaac L. Fugit. It has been said of I. T. Gibson, that he was "the father of Masonry in Greensburg," which is in a large measure true. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 3II One of the most noteworthy events in the early history of Greensburg Masonry was the observance of St. John's Day, June 24, 1859. It was the first elaborate ceremony attem])ted l)y the local lodge since its organization. Visitors were present from Brookxille. Shelbyville and many other towns in the state. Hon. Caleb B. Smith, one of the most famous of Indiana's United States senators, addressed a large assemblage in the forenoon at the court house. At noon several hundred visiting Masons sat down to a sumptuous repast in Stockman's elevator near the freight depot. After dinner they marched to the Masonic hall, where the formal program was given. Rev. Joseph Cotton responded to the toast, "This Day We Celebrate." "Masonry" was described b\- I. T. Gibson. Other toasts were as follow: "Our Newly Elected Worthy Ma.ster." Daniel Stewart; "Our Visiting Brethren," Rev. J. Brockway, Hartsville; "Our Bachelor Friends," R. C. Talbott and I. G. Grover. Another point of interest in connection with the local Masonic lodge is the fact that it is the only lodge in the world which has ever elected and initiated a negro. The lodge has received one large bequest, Aaron Howard leaving it three thousand dollars at the time of his death. MILFORD LODGE NO. 94. Milford Lodge No. 94, Free and Accepted Masons, was organized on May 28, 1850, with the following officers and charter members: Isaac Fugate, worshipful master; Samuel Todd, senior warden; John King, junior warden; Jacob ]\Iiller, James Mandlove, Henry B. Smally, Albert G. Hanks, William Sefton and Stamper Perry. The lodge now has ninety-seven mem- bers and during its existence has initiated more than three hundred candi- dates. The lodge owns its own hall, which is valued at two thousand dol- lars, and meets regularly. Its present officers are : Sherley Wasson, wor- shipful master; Charles Worland, senior warden; Lincoln Vandiver, junior warden; J. M. Luther, treasurer: Dal Neibert. secretary; Clarence Worland, senior deacon: Wallace Chamjj, junior deacon, and Nelson Henderson, tyler. CLARKSBURG LODGE NO. 1 24. Inquiry has not discovered the date of the founding of the Clarks- burg lodge or any of the earl\- history pertaining to this chapter. The pres- 312 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. ent beautiful brick building in which the lodge meetings are held is the prop- erty of this chapter. This lodge has a niembershii) at present of fifty. The present tifficers are as follows: Birney E. Hite, worshipful master; Ora .\. Hite, senior warden; Clifford A. Martz, junior warden; D. I*". Hite, secretary; James B. Clark, treasurer; George F. Rogers, tyler; H. C. Doles, senior deacon; Lon H. Kerrick, junior deacon; W. E. Thomas and P. E. Clark, stewards; Homer ^I. Campliell, chaplain. WESTPORT LODGE NO. 52. Westport Lodge No. 52 was organized in 1852, but the charter for the installation of this lodge was not granted until the following year. In i860 the lodge suffered the loss of their hall by fire and the early records were de- stroyed. This makes it impossible to give the early histijry of the lodge in a complete and concise form. James McKelvey was the first candidate taken into this lodge after it was organized. Dr. William ' House is the oldest living member of this lodge, in which he has been active for fifty years. The following is a partial list of the charter members: Christopher Stott, Noah Re\'nokIs, Dr. Pottinger, W. T. Rex'nolds, Robert Armstrong and Hiram Bruce. The present building, which is valued at two thousand dollars, is the property of this lodge. The present membership totals one hundred and twenty-four. The officers who are serving the lodge at present are as fol- low: W. W. Ricketts, worshipful master; Clay demons, senior warden; Carl Keith, junior warden; Ray D. Patrick, senior deacon; Harry Tucker, junior deacon; James Raine\', t\der; Glen Gartin, secretary; H. \'. Co.x, treasurer. NEW POINT LODGE NO. 255. New Point Lodge No. 255, Free and Accepted Masons, was organized on May 29, i860. The records of this lodge fail to give the names of the charter members. The first officers were: Joel Pennington, worshipful mas- ter; Edward I'aremore, senior warden; Ezekiel R. Cook, junior warden. The present membership numbers forty-five. The lodge building was erected in 1 861 at a cost of one thousand dollars, and is a very substantial brick structure. The present officers are Edbert Starks, worshipful master; Dr. Harlev McKee, senior warden; \\'illiam Haas, junior warden. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. ADAMS LODGE NO. 269 3 '3 Adams Lodge No. 269, located at Adams, was organized in the year 1856, with W. \V. Riley as worshipful master. Hiram C. Whitlow and John G. Guthrie were the two first master ]\Iasons of this lodge. This lodge sur- rendered its charter in 1877. ALERT LODGE NO. 395. The Alert Lodge No. 395 was organized on May 25, 1869, with the following members serving the lodge as the first officers : William T. Strict- land, worshipful master; Agnus J. RlcCloud, senior warden; James S. Ban- nister, junior warden. The following were also among the list of charter members : Jere Gant, John B. Seal, Frank Seal, Samuel Thomas, Louis Gant. Mulford Baird, ^^'illiam Keeley and A. B. Mims. This lodge is in a prosperous condition and owns its own ([uarters. which are \'alued at one thousand five hundred dollars. The present officers are: Clifford N. Fulton, worshipful master; Ray Fulton, senior warden; ClifYord Carter, junior war- den; J. Otis Beesley, treasurer; John C. Arnold, secretary; Ray Irwin, sen- ior deacon; George B. Blazer, junior deacon; John W. Hamilton, tyler; Ray Bannister and William Starks, stewards ; Thomas Norton, John W. Spears and Smith S. Thompson, trustees. ORDER OF THE EASTERN STAR. The Order of the Eastern Star was organized for the purpose of creat- ing a social tie between Masons and their families and to give to the fra- ternity a helpmate in the beneficent work of the order in caring for widows and orphans and to assist in all deeds of mercy and love. Master Masons in good standing, their wives, daughters, mothers, widows and sisters who have attained the age of eighteen years are eligible to membership in this order. Lois Chapter No. 147 was instituted at Greensburg, February 15, 1894, by Past Grand Patron Martin H. Rice, of Indianapolis, with thirty charter members. The first officers were : Worthy matron, Mae Cliilds ; worth}' patron, Frank H. Drake ; associate matron, Rena J. Gilchrist ; secretary, Eliza H. Lambert; treasurer, Ella Childs; conductress, Eliza J. Crisler; associate conductress, Margaret Schultz ; chaplain, John W. Drake ; Adah, Carrie Meek; Ruth, Isabella F. Stout; Esther, Louisa M. Bone; Martha, Louisa 314 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Upjohn; Electa, Henrietta Bryan; warder, Pats\- J. St. John; sentinel, A, H. Christian. The office of worthy matron has since heen filled by Eliza J. Crisler, Ella M. Stont, Missouri Moberly, Esther Lockwood, Margaret Rigby, Liz- zie Styers, Lizzie Nordmeyer, Margaret Glenn, Ella Kirkpatrick, Jennie Shirk, Rena J. Gilchrist, Elizabeth Ehrhardt, Emma Creath and Ella M. Forkner. The office of worthy patron has since been filled by James C. Pulse, J. F. Childs, William P. Skeen, Coleman T. Pleak, Ira G. Rigby, Tay- lor F. Meek, George B. Von Phul, W. F. Gilchrist, Herschel Smiley, Owen Steadman, Bruce Bishop, Dr. E. T. Riley and Will Ehrhardt. Nannie L. Kofoid and Will Ehrhardt are the present (1915) holders, respectively, of these stations, with Candace Shepherd, associate matron; Eliza J. Crisler, secretary ; Anna P. Mowrer, treasurer ; Elizabeth Ehrhardt, conductress ; Louise Crews, associate conductress; Margaret Glenn, chaplain; Sallie House, marshal ; Clara Hamilton, pianist ; Carrie Meek, Adah ; Jessie Skeen, Ruth ; Jennie Ainsworth, Esther; Elizabeth Bennett, Martha; Alfaretta Havens, Electa ; Lizzie McConnell \Miite, warder, and Oliver P. Creath, sentinel. The membership now numljers one hundred and twenty-four; fifty-three have been lost by death and sixty-eight by dimit and suspension. The crowning feature of the work of the order in Indiana at present is the building of the Eastern Star and Masonic Home at Franklin. It was through the persistent efforts of the Eastern Star that this was made pos- sible. Two hundred and fifteen acres of land have been purchased near Franklin, on which the buildings will be erected. The cornerstone is to be laid in INIay, 1916. In this home, unfortunate Masons, their wives, widows and children may find a safe and pleasant retreat, surrounded with the com- forts and conveniences of a home in every sense of the word. The children will be carefully trained, educated, well clothed and fed, thus symbolizing charity, truth and loving kindness. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. ' 315 KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS. On August 24, 1886. Greensljurg Lodge No. 148, Knights of Pythias, was organized by Grand Chancellor Charles E. Shively, assisted by W. L. Heiskel, John H. Russe, Frank Bowers and other grand lodge officers. The Pythian "goat" was hard at work by three o'clock on that memorable after- noon, initiating thirty-two charter members, who were as follows : Past Chancellor, J. W. McRoberts ; Chancellor Commander, Marine D. Tackett ; Vice-Chancellor, Max Mergenheim; Prelate, J. Loraine Wright; Keeper of Records and Seal, P. H. Moulton ; Master of Exchequer, J. T. Cunningham; Master of Finance, S. F. Rogers; Inside Guard, Will Cumback, Jr.; Outside Guard, F. M. Bryan; D. A. Myers, C. C. Lowe, J. D. White, W. L Johnson, C. S. Williams, T. J. Magee, W. H. Buckley, A. B. Armington, C. M. Thomas, W. O. Elder, George L. Roberts, A. M. Elkins, C. E. Schobey. John O. Marshall, Charles F. Belser, D. L. Scobey, William A. Johnson, Phil Weymer, Henry Black, A. M. Willoughby, J. E. McKim, Frank Eu- bank. It was a hot day when Greensburg Lodge was instituted, and ever since its birth its members have been a warm, live set of fellows. This lodge nas always been progressive and now has over four hundred and sixty members. The business affairs of the lodge have been based upon a firm footing from the very inception of the organization. The officers who have been in charge of the lousiness affairs have at all times as jealously guarded the interests of this fraternity of Pythionism as they would their own homes. The best busi- ness transaction was made in June, 1891, when Frank Robinson, Ezra Guth- rie and George L. Roberts, then trustees, purchased the old Falconbury block and vacant lot adjoining. During the autumn of 1898 the trustees, Charles S. Williams, J. P. Thomson and Oscar G. Miller, let the contract to Ed Dille for the present useful and up-to-date business building- and lodge room, occupying the ground just south of the new Y. M. C. A. building on North Broadway. This fine Pythian building is now the home and resort of all loyal hearted Knights. Beautiful club rooms are also maintained, for the pleasure and recreation of members of the K. of P. Club. Almost seven years ago this lodge had the pleasure of being the means of providing a beautiful opera house for the city of Greensburg. This opera house is the pride of every Knight and is highly appreciated by all citizens of the city and county. Besides expending almost fifty thousand dollars for these buildings, equipment and furnishings, the lodge has been at all 3l6 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. times liljeral and iK-nehcent, performing many deeds of charity and l)ene\-o- lence, which were an outgrowth of the sentiments inculcated in the minds and hearts of the members by the teaching of Pythian principles. Ft has paid out in benefits and benevolent contributions since its organization over thirty thousand dollars. Greensburg Lodge has also been high in the councils of the grand lodge of Indiana, ha\ing at this time two grand lodge officers. Brothers John W. Craig and Arthur J. Lowe, who is at present a member of the supreme lodge of the United States and Canada. The present officers of Greensljurg Lodge are: Past chancellor, E. E. Hite; chancellor commander, Ben Havens; vice-chancellor: Ira M. Ainsworth; prelate, Charles Howe; keeper of records and seal, Charles H. Dowden; master of exchequer, Robert McKay; master of finance, E. A. Rankin; master-at-arms, Stanton Guthrie; inside guard, Rollin A. Turner; outside guard, Erank Osting; trustees, Oscar G. Miller, Bert Morgan and David Blackmore. The cardinal principles of this lodge are founded upon the exercise of friendship, charit}- and jjcnevolence. Nothing of a sectarian or political character is permitted within its sacred precincts. Tolerance in religions, obe- dience to law and loyalty to government are fully emphasized. The Pythian order teaches its members to exercise charity toward offenders; to construe words and deeds in their least unfavorable light; grant honestv of purpose and good intentions to others and bring Ijack any thoughtless or wayward Knight who has forgotten the Pythian teachings given in the castle hall. LETTS CORNER LODGE NO. 375. Letts Corner Lodge Xo. ;^'/^, Knights of Pythias, was instituted on April 13, 1892. It owns a lodge building, valued at five thousand dollars and is in a flourishing condition, both financially and numerically. The first officials of this lodge were : W. A. Taggart, past chancellor ; H. H. King, chancellor commander; H. H. Boyd, vice-chancellor; J, H. Stout, prelate; John G. Evans, master of exchecjuer ; G. W. Fraley, master of finance ; K. L, Adams, keeper of records and seal; Silas Sweeney, master-at-arms; A. J. Adams, inside guard, and J. D. E. Elliott, outside guard. Other charter members of the organization were O. S. Mitchell, W. T. Morgan, W. F. Keisling, Edgar Whipple, P. M. Johnson, Edgar Samuels, C. J. Armstrong, M. S. Parker, John A. Jackson, Charles Stout, \\'. L. E\-ans, U. S. Parker, William Jordan, Albert Jordan, John Hill, George Gardner, C. J. Red, DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 3I7 Urso McCorkle, J. L. Davis, H. :\I. Mitchell, George Hodson, W. S. Whipple, J- W. Crise and John Armstrong. der; Oda J^'ear. vice-chancellor; Grover Williams, prelate; Walter Jackson, master-at-\vork ; ^V. G. Fraley, keeper ut records and seal; E. H. Jackson, masfer of finance; Urso Bentley, master-at-arms; Ora Thurston, inside guard; Morris Tudor, outside guard, and John A. Jackson, John L. Davis and Harry Black, trustees. Sardinia Lodge No. 146 is an auxiliary of this organiza- tion. ST. PAUL LODGE NO. 368. St. Paul Lodge Xo. 368, Knights of Pythias, was organized at St. Paul on August 29, 1892. The charter was granted on June 7, 1893. The charter members were, J. C. Leech, G. T. Lefifler, B. F. Trader, S. T. Hutson, H. C. Roberts, T. A. Kelley, F. H. Goff, E. L. Severs, W. J. Martin, E. W. Noah, Charles Allison, William Bush, W. A. Reed, O. A. Seward, J. L. Shelhorn, R. Hendrickson, J. A. Goff, L. E. Dixon, J. R. Kanouse, L. E. Lines, G. F. Bailey, C. M. Barnes, J. W. Jenkins, C. C. Fisher, F. M. Allison, F. P. Walton, F. M. Howard, Daniel Apple, Harry Hayes, J. M. Shortridge, J. P. Garrett, J. F. Strickfurd, John Doggett and Conrad JMinger. The first ofBcers were, past chancellor, L. E. Dixon ; chancellor commander, J. W. Jenkins; vice-chancellor, F. P. Walton; prelate, C. C. Fisher; master of exchequer, R. Hendrickson; master of finance, J. M. Shortridge; keeper of records and seal, L. E. Lines; master-at-arms, O. A. Seward; inner guard, J. E. Walton; outer guard, Frank Goff; and C. M. Barnes, James Goff and James Severs, trustees. The present membership consists of twenty past chancellors and sixty- two Knights. The present ofBcers are : Chancellor commander, Joseph Stotsenlnirg ; vice-chancellor, Manley Corwein; prelate, George W. Boling; master-at- work, E. H. Crosby; keeper of records and seal, J. T. Cuskaden; master of finance, Orla Cuskaden; master of exchequer, J. B. McKee; master-at- arms, W. J. Martin; inner guard, G. T. Leffler; outer guard, Jacob Johannes; trustees are W. J. Martin, D. J. Ballard and Jacob Johannes. The lodge property consists of a three-story brick building, constructed in 1903, at a cost of about five thousand dollars. Propert}' and improve- ments are estimated to be worth at least eight thousand dollars. The building is a monument to the enterprise of the Knights of Pythias in the town of St. Paul, and the rentals are a source of income which is (|uite 3l8 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. a bolster to the finances of the lodge at this critical time, the lodge having considerable sickness among its members. The lodge is now taking on new life, after a long period of laxity, and bids fair to regain the place that it once held, as being one of the live lodges of the state. BURNEY LODGE NO. 34I. Burney Lodge No. 341, Knights of Pythias, was organized, June 8, 1892, with the following charter members: Edwin Jackson, Morgan Miers, Ira Lewis, E. E. Mouse, O. B. Trimble, William G. ^liner, John G. Gartin, Levi M. Craig, John E. Miller, Charles T. Powner, T. T. Howell, James M. Hiner, William A. Gartin, John \V. Burney, G. S. Crawford, Harve Pumphrey, John Johnson, Felix Garten, G. W. Wiley, Charles Braden, John Hunter, G. W. Miner, Ed Stewart, Frank House, Francis Pumphrey, James Pumphrey, Julius Benson, Francis Galbraith, G. M. Miner, Jr., Hershell Miers and Ira Ballard. Charles L. Powner, past chancellor, installed this lodge. The first officers were L. T. Howell, chancellor commander; Morgan L. Miers, vice-chancellor; James Hiner, prelate; F. L. Galbraith, master of exchec|uer : Ed Jackson, master of finance ; W. E. Arnold, keeper of records and seal; Frank House, master-at-arms; William Garton, inner guard; G. M. Miner, outer guard ; J. W. Buniey, O. W. Trimble and Charles T. Powner, trustees ; Charles T. Powner representative. The present building was erected in 1895 ^'t' ^^'^^ memljership has almost reached the hundred mark. The present officers are as follows : Freman Sasser, chancellor com- mander; W. W. Barnes, vice-chancellor; Samuel Lawson, prelate; Carl Pavy, master-at-work ; J. H. Dean, keeper of records and seal; James Galbraith, master of finance; E. A. Porter, master of exchequer; Bert Oliphant, master- at-arms ; Emzee Elder, inner guard ; Herbert Stribling, outer guard ; Floyd Miner, host ; C. W. Pumphrey, Edward Jackson and Ira Carmen, trustees. This lodge has an auxiliary in the Rathbone Sisters, which was organ- ized on October 3, 1900. This chapter bears the local name of Triangle Temple No. 232. WESTPORT LODGE NO. 3 I 7. Westport Lodge No. 317, Knights of Pythias, was organized. May 8, 1S91, with the following charter members: James M. Burke. William Hause, J. N. Keith, L. E. McCoy, E. G. Davis, J. T. McCullough, M. D. Harding, T. M. Durpree, S. R. Ames, J. E. Davis. William Martin, H. I. Fueston, S. C. Knarr, \A\ G. Updike, S. C. Scripture, T. Strout, T. E. F. Miller, W. R. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 319 Barnes, G. T.' Alexander, William F. King, Silas Sweeny, E. G. Radley, B. B. Rogers. The first officers were as follows: James M. Burk, past chancellor ; William Hause, chancellor commander ; J. N. Keith, vice-chan- cellor; L. E. McCoy, prelate; E. G. Davis, master of e.xchecjuer; J. T. McCullough, master of finance; M. G. Harding, keeper of records and seal; T. M. Dupree, master-at-arms ; S. R. Adams, inner guard ; J. E. Davis, outer guard. The building which this lodge occupies at present is the property of the lodge and is valued at seven thousand dollars. The present officers are, George C. Nicholson, chancellor commander; J. M. Tucker, vice-chancellor; Edward Whalen, prelate ; Walter Watterman, master-at-work ; A. Boicourt, keeper of records and seal; E. L. Shaw, master of finance; M. D. Harding, master of exchequer ; \Veaver Elliott, master-at-arms ; J. E. Davis, inner guard; James H. Keith, outer guard. Miriam Temple No. 246, Pythian Sisters, was organized on October 2, 1901, as an auxiliary of the Westport lodge. INDEPENDENT ORDER OF ODD FELLOWS. Newpoint Lodge No. 656, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, was organized on January 22, 1890. The following men applied to the Greens- burg lodge for a chapter to be installed at Newpoint : William L. Has- brouck, William Cheek, Jet Boyd, A. E. Dorsey, Richard Christain and James Borden. The lodge was instituted on April 16, 1890, by E. S. Porter, who was appointed by the grand master to install this chapter. The charter members were as follow : Leander Starks, John L. Hilliard, George Hollinsbee, L. C. Jackson, John Dryer, Charles Marlin, H. P. Dan- forth, L. W. D. German, Benjamin I\etcham, John W. Snedeker, George \V. Foster, James E. Butler, and Herman Green. The following members ser\ed the lodge as the first officers : L. C. Jackson, noble grand ; Leander Starks, vice-grand; Charles Marlin, recording secretary; George Hollinsbee, permanent secretary ; John L. Hilliard, treasurer. The lodge purchased its present cjuarters for the consideration of one thousand dollars and has made improvements since that time. A piano was purchased in 1910. This lodge is in a prosperous condition and at present has eighty-five members enrolled. Benefits of four dollars per week are paid the sick members, and the resources at present amount to one thou- sand four hundred and eighty-five dollars and twenty-four cents. The present officers are : Lewis Bare, noble grand ; Frank Walker, 320 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. vice-grand; R. F. Carr, recording secretary; F. M. Thackery, permanent secretary ; Ora Cheek, treasurer. D.\UGHTERS OF REBEKAH. Lodge No. 523, Daughters of Reljekah. which locally is known as White Dove lodge, was instituted on .\ugust 31, 1896. This is an au.x- iliary of Newpoint lodge. The following were charter members of White Dove lodge: John H. Hilliard, Ora Cheek, John ^1. Green. Ilattie Alarlin. Ollie ]\Iinning, Minnie Snedeker and Mrytle Jerman. SANDUSKY LODGE NO. 856. Sandusk}^ Lodge No. 856, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, was organ- ized on ]May 21. 1908. with the f(jllowing charter memljers : John L. demons, Louis Ruddell, Lafayette Bowman, Benjamin T. I'iiley, Llewellyn Fleetwood, William H. Scott, Harve}- Townsend, William Maple, Otis Nation, George Smith, Albert Bowman and Wesley Bennett. The first officers were: Benjamin T. Riley. nol)le grand; J. \V. Bennett, vice-grand: Otis Nation, secretary; Louis Ruddell, treasurer. The lodge has had a prosperous growth and at present numbers sixty-fi\e members. The present officers are : Frank Maple, noble grand; Llewellyn I^Ieetwood, \ice-grand; Ed Ricketts, record- ing secretary; John W. Patterson, corresponding secretary; Orville Gar- rett, treasurer. CENTENARY LODGE NO. 535, MILFORD. Decatur Lodge No. 103, Independent Order of Odd Fellow's, jour- neyed down to Milford on June 6, 1876, and assisted in organizing Cen- tenary Lodge No. 535. \\\ D. Dailey, district deputy noble grand, had charge of the ceremonies. The following charter members were present : A. P. Bennett, Frank Getzendanner, Leonard Worcester, S. L. Jackson and E. S. Porter. The latter presided as noljle grand ; L. Worcester, vice-grand ; Z. T. Boicourt, treasurer; J. K. Ewing, secretary; Frank Getzendanner, conductor; G. W. Richey, warden; Sylvester Kendall, inner guard; .\dam Stegmaier, outer guard. Thirteen applications for memijership were favor- ably acted upon. No. 103 presented the new lodge with paraphernalia and the following new- officers were elected: \\'. T. Jackson, noble grand; John Braden, \-ice-grand ; Dr. J. H. Alexander, secretar}- ; James Braden, treasurer. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 32 1 The Icxlge suffered the loss of its rooms on April 24, 1877. The present liuilding was completed in 1856 and the lodge hall, which is located in the second story, was purchased by the lodge in 1877 for the considera- tion of six hundred dollars. The present membership numbers eighty-five, benefits and resources amount to two thousand four hundred and eighty- seven dollars and five cents. The present officers of the lodge are as fol- low : Wallace Champ, noble grand; William Oliphant, vice-grand; Elmer Swift, secretary; Charles Braden, treasurer; O. B. Trimble, Marion Lane and James Conk, trustees. ADAMS LODGE NO. 79O. Adams Lodge No. 790, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, was installed on November 13, 1902. Its first officers were: J. R. Turner, noble grand ; I. C. Glass, vice-grand ; Webster Rhoads, treasurer ; J. N. Cushman, financial secretary, and Walter Cory, secretary. Other charter members were : J. D. Walker, C. E. Shields, David Longstreet, M. M. Coy, J. A. Ford, R. G. Kirby, James Gay, William Van Ausdall, J. A. Shep- hard, M. R. Turner, T. R. Davis and A. G. Christ. Fire ccjmpletely destroyed th.e lodge building on November i, 1906, but a new hall was immediately erected and the lodge continues to make steady progress. Its present officers are : Roy Darby, noble grand ; Ed. Shaner, vice-grand ; John Inman, secretary ; Merritt Webb, financial secre- tary, and Walter Rhoades, treasurer. The lodge hall is valued at three thousand fi\'e hundred dollars. CLARKSBURG LODGE NO. 359. Clarksburg Lodge No. 559 was organized on May 23, 1878, and has a very strong membership. Its first officers and other charter members were: A. A. Chenoweth, noble grand; A. S. Creath, vice-grand; G. T. Bell, secretary; J. A. Miller, treasurer; W. D. McCracken, warden; W. W. Ewick, outer guard. It was organized by A. P. Bennett, Samuel J. Jackson, F. Getzendanner, Leonard Worcester, Joel W. Stites and A. Stegmaier, of Greensburg. The lodge owns a substantial Iniilding which cost more than five thousand dollars to erect. (21) 322 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. WF.STPORT LODGE NO. 68 1. Westport Lodge No. 68i was installed on August 27, 1891, with the following officers and charter members : Thomas Bemish, noble grand ; P. M. Rhodes, vice-grand ; W. R. Tucker, secretary ; S. C. Cann, financial secretary: G. L). Little, treasurer; Thomas Bemish, Alorris W. Brewer, E. K. Hause and O. M. Ta}lor. The lodge owns its own Iniilding, which cost five thousand five hundred dollars to erect. Its ])resent officers are : P. F. Owens, noble grand: AI. G. Stewart, vice-grand: Garl Davis, secre- tary; J. \\'. Holcomlj, financial secretar}-, and George C. Nicholson, treas- urer. Westport lodge has one hundred and forty-four members. Shik)h Lodge No. 560, Daughters of Rebekah, is an au.xiliary of West- port lodge. This organization was efl^ected on January 18, 1898, by the following women : Annie Nicely, ]\Irs. George \\'heelwright, .Sarah Owens, Mollie Keith and Mary Sample. COVENANT LODGE NO. 163. Covenant Lodge No. 163, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, at St. I'aul, was organized on July 11, 1855. The following comprise the list of charter members: Stejjhen Ridlen, Ji)nathan Kurr, George Reede, Will- iam Reede, Thomas Reede, Squire Van Kelt, jNIichael Halloren, Elisha H. Crosby, Milton Corwin, Charles J. Smith, Samuel McKee and William C. Lowden. The Odd Fellows' l)uilding was completely destroyed by fire and all the early records were destroyed, therefore it is impossible to ascertain the names of the first officers. The lodge owns a two-storv brick building, erected in 1 879, with two business rooms on the first floor. It also owns a three- story brick Iniilding. which has three stores on the first floor, while the other two stories -are occupied by the lodge. Total value of the lodge prop- erty is eight thousand six hundred forty-one dollars and fifty-five cents. The present membership numbers ninety. The present officers are: ^Varren Brook, noble grand; Thomas Woh'erton, vice-grand; H. F. Prill, recording secretary: J. V>. McKee, financial secretary; Fred Metzler, treasurer. MODERN WOODMEN OF AMERICA. Westport Camp No. 1487, Modern Woodmen of America, was organ- ized on December i, 1909, with the following officers: C. D. Owens, ven- DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 323 craljle consul; J. O. Ketcham, worthy adviser; E. I. Boicourt, l)anker: A. S. Boicourt, clerk ; C. A. Stott, escort ; George Fultz and W. H. Keith, sen- tries. The foHowing men were also numbered among the list of charter members: H. E. Clark, H. ^[. C'rowder, J. A. Elliott, Omer Givan. J. W. Evans, J. C. Hill, William Landis, J(jhn Morgan, AV. T. Stott and J. C. Talkington. The present membership numbers fort}-, with the following officers serving the camp at the present time : E. L. Shaw, venerable consul ; G. C. Nicholson, worthy adviser; E. R. Boicourt, banker; A. S. Boicourt, clerk; W. AV. Rickctts, escort; D. T. Surface, watchman; A. O. Taylor, sentry. NEWPOINT CAMP NO. 984O. Newpoint Camp No. 9840, Alodern Woodmen of America, was organ- ized on May 21, 1910. This camp was instituted by the Greensburg and Batesville degree teams and thirt_\--one members were initiated the first night, while three were added by transfer from other lodges at the time of the installation of the camp. S. G. Eitch served as head deputy for initiation. The following men were enrolled the first night : J. C. Barbe. John Brade- water, R. F. Carr, J. C. Colson, C. R. Dowden, Walter Harding, A. E. Huber, C. C. Barnard, C G. Brown, John H. Castor, William J. Colson, Holman Glidewell, B. A. Hilliard, Ira Martin, Chris. F. Myer, George M. Neimeyer, Charles Risinger, Howard F. Starks, William H. Swegman. Curtis H. AA'alker, John L. Wiecher. Harold J. Wolf, Willis R. Wolf, W. R. Castor, John Hart, George Price, AVard AVilliams, Charles Me}-er, O. P. Grove, A. L. Shazer, Harley McKee, J. E. Starks, AA'illiam C. Parmer and \'. FI. Minning. The first officers were as follow : A. T. Shazer, venerable consul ; George Neimeyer, worthy adviser; J. C. Barb, banker; R. F. Carr, clerk; A. E. Huber, escort ; John Hart, watchman ; C. C. . Barnard, sentry ; Harley S. McKee, physician. The present officers are as follow : Charles Reisinger, venerable consul; Charles Meyer, worthy adviser; AA^illiam Col- son, Ijanker; B. A. Hilliard, clerk; Glenn Gibberson, escort; AVilliani Gentry, watchman. The present membership is twenty-eight. The insurance of the meml)ers in 19 15 totaled thirty-two thousand five hundred dollars. LONE TREE CAMP NO. 7253. Lone Tree Camp No. 7253, Modern AA'oodmen of America, was organ- ized on November 24, 1899, with the following charter members: AA". H. 324 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Black, W. K. Brazelton, Charles Clemens, C. M. Carter, E. E. Davis, J. B. DeArmond, Elmer Saunders, O. M. Elder, I. F. Springer, B. S. White, W. H. Hoffmeister, M. G. Harley, W. E. Jameson, Len Marsh, George Montgomery and H. F. Pottenger. The first officers were as follow : John W. Holcomb, venerable consul; Elmer Saunders, worthy adviser; J. B. DeArmond, banker; W. R. Brazelton, clerk. Several years previous to this a camp of the Alodern Woodmen had been installed in Greensburg, but this camp never experienced a great growth and aljout the year 1898 was moved to Shelby ville. The present camp has had a flourishing existence, with a total membership at present of one hun- dred and eighty. The insurance at this time amounts to two hundred and seventy-five thousand dollars. The lodge has suffered the loss of sixteen brothers, with insurance paid out amounting to twenty-four thousand dol- lars. The officers at present are : John H. Tresler, venerable consul ; Roy Styers. worthy adviser; M. S. Wamsley, banker; Will Ehrhardt, clerk. RED MEN. Omemee Tribe No. 394, Improved Order of Red Men, at Westport, was organized on August 27, 1904, with the following charter members: George Hollensbe, James Coupa, William Eddy, Dave Clark, E. H. Hensley, D. F. Surface, S. C. Knarr, Jacob Hensley, Joseph Stuart, John Eraser, Edgar Logan, Ruben Hensley, Frank Bowers, J. M. Wynn, David Bowers, J. L. Biddinger, ^^'illiam Seasme, Oliver Seasme, Grover Bowers, Isaac Earhart, James Fulton, Matthew Frazer, Lewis Bowers, William H. Biddinger, Albert Lawrence. Charles Atkins, San ford Lay ton, Carl E. Stone, Clite Seasme, Clarence Stewart, J. E. Lawrence, S. H. Biddinger. The first officers were as follow : Isaac Earhart, senior sagamore ; J. M. Hynn, junior sagamore; J. E. Lawrence, keeper of wampum; George Hol- lensbe, sachem; C. A. Stewart, prophet; S. H. Biddinger. chief of records. The tribe at present owns property valued at one thousand one hundred dollars. Three dollars per week are paid out for sick benefits. The present membership numbers eighty-four. The present officers are Joseph Childers, senior sagamore; Harry Tucker, junior sagamore; Ira T. Colson. sachem; Wesley Idlewine, keeper of wampum; Curtis Goble, chief of records; E. H. Pusenberger, prophet. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. YONAH TRIBE NO. 47O. 32.5 Yonah Tribe No. 470, Improved Order of Red Men, was organized on April 20, 1908, at Clarksburg. The charter members who assisted in the organization of this tribe were as follow : W. C. Buell, D. H. Bently, E. A. Lewis, W. A. Dorsey, F. Morgan, I. M. Linville, A. M. Hite, B. E. Farthing, C. L. Brown, William Ray, W. E. Tingle, R. Linville, H. Ter- hune, Ed, Lanpri, R. C. Ray, C. M. Morgan, P. Campie, G. E. Marford, C. Carrell, L. Lewis, M. Ray, S. F. Bentley, S. L. Dobbyns, C. E. Freeland, R. Parker, C. Humphry, L Humphry, William Winker and F. Springmire. The present membership numbers forty-eight. The benefits for this lodge are placed at four dollars per week. The value of the present quai-ters is placed at five hundred dollars. The present officers are D. C. Demaree, sachem; J. C. Deiwert, senior sagamore; E. E. Whiten, junior sagamore; D. D. Morgan, chief of records; C. E. Freeland, keeper of wampum; C. E. Freeland, prophet. BENEVOLENT AND PROTECTIVE ORDER OF ELKS. Greensburg Lodge No. 475, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, was organized on April 26, 1899, with thirty-one charter members. The first exalted ruler was S. P. Minear. Others who have held this position since the installation of the lodge are : Charles Zoller, J. Van WoodfiU, William C. Pulse, Web WoodfiU, Fred L. Thomas, Hugh D. Wickens, Charles H. Ewing, Hal T. Kitchin, Will H. Lanham, Robert C. WoodfiU, Charles H. Dalmbert, John W. Craig, Frank Hamilton, Robert E. McKay and R. A. Turner. Since its installation the lodge has grown to a membership of one hun- dred and fifty-four and is now considered the leading social organization of the city. It is composed of representative business and professional men of Greensburg, occupies a fine suite of apartments on the north side of the square and is ever ready and willing to undertake acts of charity and kind- ness which have rendered the order distinct in all places where it has a lodge. Present officers of the order are: E. E. Hite, exalted ruler; A. E. Lemmon, esteemed leading knight; J. C. Hornung, esteemed loyal knight; James H. Lanham, esteemed lecturing knight; Hal T. Kitchin, secretary; D. A. Batterton, treasurer; Herbert Hunter, esquire; Will C. Monfort, chap- lain ; Ira Miller, inner guard, and John Crooks, tyler. Trustees are Harry Emmert, J. F. Russell and Loren L. Doles. 326 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. IMPROVED ORDER OF RED MEN. Pequonnock Tribe No. 185. Improved Order of Red ^len, was organ- ized on May 13, 1894, with the followino- charter members: John F. Childs, A. P. Bone, W. L. Bennett. \\'illiam H. Rybolt. George S. Dickey. Wilham Bruner, George Keshng, Wilham Weathers, J. B. Conover, W. A. Lawson, T. J. Powell, Dan Styers, R. F. Thomas, Branson Beeson, John Riley, Smith Riicv, (jeorge Beeson. Perry Robbins, William A. Brooks, John Abbott, A. L. Dickey, William Folks, Brack Chance, J. R. Patton, Dr. L. W. D. Jerman, Taylor F. Meek, J. W. Roberts, Charles Reed. John I. Rodman, Frank Pickett, P. I. Clark, O. H. Rybolt, Harry Reniger, R. H. Look, D. E. Biddinger, J. W. Fletcher, Joseph Reingar, Charles Phillips, Cyrns Wat- ers, E, A. Cavett, Charles S. Short. The first officers were : John F. Childs, sachem ; W. L. Bennett, senior sagamore ; J. W. Roberts, junior sagamore ; A. L. Dickey, keeper of records ; T. J. Powell, keeper of wampum ; G. O. Barnard, conductor of work ; R. F. Thomas. Branson Beeson and Frank Smith, trustees. The present beautiful I.iuilding is the jjroperty of the lodge and is valued at eighteen thousand dollars. The present membership of the lodge numbers two hundred and ninety. The present officers are : John King, sachem ; N. S. Doles, senior saga- more : Frank Murdock, junior sagamore ; Joe Renigar, prophet : \\'illiam Snell, keeper of records; G. O. Barnard, conductor of work; J. L. Luchte, keeper of wampum ; Charles A. Dowdle, Link Beeson and W. S. Harvey, trustees. DEGREE OF POCAHONTAS. Pequonnock Council No. in. Degree of Pocahontas, is an auxiliary of the Red Men's tribe of Greensburg. The charter for this order was granted on October 20, 1898. The meetings are held in the Red Men's hall. The membership at present includes seventy persons. The officers serving the lodge at this time are : Sarah Robbins. Pocahontas ; Mary Robbins. \\'eno- nah; James B. Towler, Powhatan; Jacia Pool, prophet; Lottie Dowdle. keeper of records ; L3^dia IMcMillan, keeper of wampum. PEQUONNOCK HAYMAKERS. Pequonnock Haymakers' Association No. 185J4 was chartered on May ^5' 1895. The meetings are held on Wednesday evenings in the Red Men's DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 327 hall. The membership at present totals one hundred and five. The present officers are: Dola Robbins, chief haymaker; Frank Murdock, assistant chief haymaker ; Arthur Murdock, overseer ; Dallas Land, past chief haymaker ; William M. Snell, collector of straws ; Charles Dowdle, keeper of bundles ; William Best, R. C. West and James I\I. Duncan, trustees. LOYAL ORDER OF MOOSE. The Loyal Order of Moose was organized at Louisville, Kentucky, on April 12, 1888. It is not an insurance order; there are no assessments of any character; it is not a rival uf any other fraternal organization; it is not a class organization, but is open to all good white citizens between the ages of twenty-one and fifty. At the end of 1914 the order had over one thousand four hundred and fifty lodges, with a total membership of more than half a million. The initiation fee for charter members is five dollars and after the charter is closed the initiation fee is increased to twenty-five dollars. The Moose i}ay benefits of seven dollars a week to sick or disabled members. The death benefit is one hundred dollars. Lone Tree Lodge No. 1005 at Greensburg, is the only one of this order in Decatur county. It was organized on November 12, 1913, with the fol- lowing charter members : Joseph Gentry, Fred Stiet, W. B. Brogan, Elijah Vanderdur, Clarence Stith, Benjamin Me}-er, L. J. Alexander, George Cos- mas, George A. Kurr, Sabe Perkins, C. F. Kercheval, Paul R. Tindall, \\'ill- iam McCormick, Lowe Bush, Lemuel J. Howard, Michael McCormack, Oscar F. Kuhn, Loren Hutcheson, William Weeks, Earl Martin, Ed Buchannan, Harry Vanderbur, Herschel Vanderbur, James Frances, Fred Tucker, John Muldoon, Charles Jackson, William Boyce, David Wiley, James Sparks, Morton Davis, Carl Suttles, George Richards, John A. Abbott, JefTerson Morris, D. C. Powner, Len Fischer, David Bower, Ed Bozzell, Joe Stier, Thomas Davis, William Littell, Frank Buckley, Fred Weber, William Fulks, Sherman Patton, William B. Lemasters, James Smith, David Welsh, W. T. Vanderbur, Ross Grimes, B. E. Baker, W. H. Scripture, Ace Dean, Ora Grimes, J. Dunn, Clifford English. The officers at present are as follow : Joseph Gentry, past dictator ; Paul R. Tindall, past dictator; Michael Gutting, dictator; Frank Murdoch, vice-director ; Blaine Hoin, prelate ; Sabe Perkins, secretary ; Earl Crooks, treasurer; Bernard Menzie, sergeant-at-arms ; Martin Sparks, inner guard; Ace Dean, outer guard ; Ben Meyer, James Ford and J. L. Alexander, trus- tees. The memljership at i)resent totals three hundred and seventy-five. 328 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. KNIGHTS OF ST. JOHN. St. Boniface Comniandery No. 227, Knights of St. John, was organ- ized on October 9, 1914, with a total niembersiiip of thirty-six. The instal- lation of this chapter took place on Sunday, October 18th. The following comprises a list of the charter members : Rev. A. J. Urich, Dr. N. C. Bau- man, Edward Luken, John B. Rolfes, Bernard Blankman, Edward Kroeger, B. \\'. Zapfe, John Schoetmer, Lawrence Duerstock, Clem Duerstock, Joseph Duerstnck, George Frye, Ed Fr}-e, William Frye, Leo Frye, George Luken, Henry Luken, Louis Luken, Louis Schoetmer, Henry Meier, Clem Herbert, .\ndre\v Butz, Frank \'aske, Bernard Harping, Benjamin Harping, Charles Witkemper, John Witkemper, Louis Moorman, Joseph Moorman, Jr., Albert Goldschmidt, Louis Moenkedick, Joseph Kesterman, Joseph Redelman, Edward Feldnian, Lawrence Ruhl, John Wenning. The present officers are Rev. W. J. Urich, cha])lain ; Dr. N. C. Bauman, president; Ed Luken, first vice-president; John B. Rolfes, second vice-presi- dent; Bernard Blankman, recording and corresponding secretary; Edward Kroeger, financial secretary, B. W. Zapfe. treasurer; John Schoetmer, cap- tain; Ed Kroeger, first lieutenant; Lawrence Duerstock, second lieutenant; George Frye, William Frye, Lawrence Ruhl, Joseph Duerstock, Bernard Harping, trustees. The present memliership has reached forty-eight and the growth of this chapter has not reached its maximum. This lodge is divided into a military and social body. The military body consists of twenty-two members at present. The members dress in full uniform on certain church celebrations, making the ceremonies very impressive. They also meet for drill twice each month. The Knights have rented the Scheidler hall for their meetings, but expect to build a hall of their own in a short time. All sick members are taken care of and the lodge pays a certain benefit to all sick members. Each member is assessed five dollars annually, paid in quarterly installments. The members also give social entertainments and dances to help defray the lodge expenses. CHAPTER XII. SOCIAL AND LITERARY CLUBS. GREENSBURG DEPARTMENT CLUB. The liistory of the Greensburg Department Chib is unicjiie. Eight musical and Hterary chibs in 1913 testify to tlie interest Greensburg women have manifested in the purely cultural side of club life. But their member- ship was limited and their range of activity narrowed by tradition and the avowed purpose of the organization. There were many women outside of these circles who longed for cultural advantages, and many within them who longed for opportunities for greater service to the community. It was this growing impulse toward service rather than any spirit of restlessness or discontent, that inspired the new movement. It was especially appropriate that the Cycle, the pioneer among the women's clubs of the town, should take the initiative. A committee from this club, of which Mrs. J. F. Goddard was chairman, visited each club and presented a plan of organization. Seven of the clubs voted to assist in the enterprise and delegated their officers to be a general committee to discuss and decide the various cjuestions of organization. From this representative body the seven presidents were chosen to serve as a constitutional committee. This committee, Mrs. R. M. Thomas, chairman ; Mrs. W. C. Ehrhardt, Mrs. J. C. Meek, Mrs. Web Woodfill, Miss Camilla Donnell, Miss Mary Rankin and Miss Eula Christian, with Mrs. Goddard as an advisory member, had the wisdom to provide for a growth far beyond their expectation and their work has been subjected to but few minor changes. The constitution was accepted by the general committee and published. Mrs. Goddard, who had presided at all of the meetings of the general committee and whose interest and activity never failed, was elected president. The other officers were : First \-ice-president, Mrs. D. \V. Weaver; second vice-president. Miss Emma Donnell ; recording secretary, Mrs. Locke Bracken ; corresponding secretary, Miss Vessie Riley ; financial secretary, Mrs. W. C. Ehrhardt : treasurer. Miss Ethel Watson ; directors, Mrs. Marshall Grover, Mrs. C. R. Bird, Mrs. J. K. Ewing, Mrs. George Ewing, Mrs. R. M. Thomas, Mrs. O. G. Miller. 330 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. In February and March of 1913 one hundred and twenty-five women, members of the original seven small clubs, signed the constitution and became charter members of the Greensburg Department Club. The motto for the club was, "United Progression," and time has proved that it was well chosen. For, th.ough each one gave up much that she valued in the old associations, she did it cheerfully with a vision before her of greater oportunities both for herself and others. The fir.st regular meeting was held on October 7, 1913. The ^'ear book provides for eight meetings during the year, two of a business and social nature and six which Ijring before the club lecturers and musicians of ability. But the real life of the club is found in the four departments, art, literature, music and social economics. The art depart- ment was formed nearly a year after the organization of the club, but brax'ely began its career with an art exhibition of great value. The plan is to make this an annual event in the life of the club and community. The members of the department carry on a study of the history and appreciation of art, with the aid of occasional lecturers. The literary department began with two lecture circles, but the number of these popular circles grows with time. The organization of the evening lecture circle opened the doors of the clulj to those who are Inisy during the day. The music department may lie charac- terized as the most generous, for it has opened its meetings to the general club a number of times and its choral organization adds greatly to the club meetings. It is hoped that the May festival may become a permanent feature of the year's work. In the social economics department the spirit of service finds its largest field of acti\'ity. The three circles. ci\"ic, e\'ening ci\'ic circle and mothers' circle, began at once to co-operate in various civic enterprises. Sanitation, fly extermination, "the city beautiful, " "shop early" campaigns, community Cln'istmas tree, and "clean up week." are a few of the activities which owe their origin to this department. The work accomplished during the first two years is noteworthy, and a continued educational campaign will finally win the hearty support of the whole communitv. A domestic science circle, under this department, will be popular with a nunilier of women. An unusual and very interesting feature of the club is the auxiliary young peo- ple's department. This circle follows somewhat the same line of work as the art department, thus developing appreciation and taste. The Greensburg Department Club lias been fortunate in many ways. The unselfish and unsparing devotion of its first president, Mrs. Goddard, inspired each member with something of her own spirit, and busy men and women have given generously of their time and strength to help her. Her tact won the respect and co-operation of business men and city officials. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 33 1 While the thought of an adei|uate chib house lias been in the mind of many from the first, for some years the ckib must depend upon the continued generosity of the churches, the city hall and private homes. An important step was taken when the club accepted an invitation to join the Indiana Federation of Clubs, for in that organization it can Ijoth give and receive inspiration. The member.^hip at the end of two years was three times that of the charter enrollment. Sucli an enthusiastic beginning is seldom the fortune of new enterprises, but the hearty interest of each member will continue its inspiration through many years of influential activity. The last meeting of the Greensburg Department Club for 191 5 was held on May 4, in the Knights of Pythias lodge room. In order that future generations of the city ma}- know what their good forefathers did on this night, the full report of this meeting is here gi\-en as it appeared in the Grccnshiini Daily Rcz'icw of May 5, 191 5: "This being the annual business meeting, reports of the officers and chairmen of the various committees were heard and accepted. Two new members, Mrs. Bert Askren and Mrs. Dan Linegar, were voted into the club. "Mrs. Goddard. the president, being ill, the \ice-president, Mrs. D. W. \\'ea\er, had charge of the meeting. She read a note from Mrs. Goddard, who sent her regrets at ni)t being present and also sent words of cheer and encouragement to the club. A member of the club expressed the sentiments of the entire club in words of deepest praise for and appreciation of the president. Her words were voiced unanimously by the club members. After the business, a short program followed. Miss Gertrude Haas gave two piano numbers. -\ play, entitled "A Mouse Trap," by W. D. Howells, was given. Following was the cast of characters : Mr. Willis Campbell, Mr. Charles Ewing; Mrs. Somers (widow), Mrs. W". W. Bonner; Mrs. Carmen, ]Mrs. R. R. Hamilton ; Mrs. Roberts, Miss Marie Braden ; Mrs. Dennis, Mrs. A. M. Reed; Mrs. Miller, Miss Ethel Ewing; Jane (maid). Miss Florine Sefton. "Each character acted the part well, especially Mrs. Somers, the widow, and Mr. Camjjbell. The ])lay affurded much i)leasure and merriment for those present. A social time followed, when refreshments, consisting of ice cream, strawberries, cake, cofTee and mints, were served. Thus the second annual meeting passed, with business mixed with much pleasure." KAPPA KAPP.\ KAPPA. The Omega Chapter of Kappa Kappa Kappa was organized in Greens- burg in 1907, with Mary Littell Tremain, Lela Robbins Christian, Helen 332 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Baker Lumbers, Ruth Bonner ]\Ieek, ]\Iary Isgrigg Hamilton and Anna Bird Thomas as charter members. The first officers of the chapter were Ruth Bonner Meek, president: Mary Littell Tremain, vice-president: Lela Robbins Christian, recording secretary; Mary Isgrigg HamiUoh, corresponding sec- retary, and Anna Bird Thomas, treasurer. It is afhhated with the general state society of Kappa Kappa Kappa, which was founded at Aliss Sewell's School for Girls in Indianapolis in 1904. Since that time it has grown in numbers so that now more than one thousand five hundred girls in the state of Indiana wear the skull and cross keys, the society badge. The object of the organization is "to bring girls into a close, unselfish relationship, which shall be beneficial to themselves as well as to others." Several kinds of charitable work are carried on by the chapter, as well as the general societ}', and at all times there is a willing response to any appeal for help. Its purposes are two-fold — charitable and social, and by both means girls are brought into the "unselfish relationship," which is the object of the organization. This chapter, aside from assisting the Associated Charities, has given aid to defective children from poor families: helped high school students with funds so that they might graduate : paid hospital and operation expenses and given material help in cases where, under other circumstances, help would not have been accepted. At present there is a membership of eighteen girls, all of whimi are active workers. The officers are: President, Mignum W'hite: \'ice-president. Bright Emmert ; treasurer, Mae Montgomery Harrison : recording secretary, Ruth White : corresponding secretary. ]\Iarie Braden. THE CYCLE. The Cycle claims the distinction of being the pioneer literary cIuIj of Greensburg. It was organized on March 5, i8'gi, by Mrs. S. H. Morris, and the following members were admitted during the first year of its history : Miss Hannah Baker, Miss Sadie Baker, Mrs. W. W. Bonner, Mrs. Sam Covert, Mrs. George Dunn, Jr., Mrs. J. K. Ewing, Mrs. J. F. Goddard, Miss Jessie Hart, Miss Margaret Lathrop, ^liss Clara Lambert, Mrs. Jessie F. Moore, Mrs. S. H. Morris, Mrs. Milton F. Parsons, Mrs. A. Prather, Miss Vessie Riley, Mrs. George B. Stockman, Miss Fannie Wooden, Mrs. A. M. Willoughby, Miss Mollie Zoller, Miss Lou Zoller, Mrs. Enos Porter, Mrs. R. M. Thomas. ]\Irs. T- V. Schofield. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 333 The first president was Mrs. S. H. Morris. Its object was to promote social intercourse between unmarried and young married ladies of the city and for scientific and literary culture. Membership was limited to twenty- five. During the twenty-one years of the club's existence these two objects were ever kept foremost. Discovering and developing much latent talent, musicians, story writers, poets, dramatic readers and actors were secured, making it possible to present many rare and unique entertainments at its frequent open meetings. The Cycle was always noted for its hospitality and came to be a dominant factor in the social life of Greensburg. Being the mother of literary clubs here, it always sought to maintain a dignity of purpose and to set a good example to its numerous offspring. The club in every way fulfilled the mission for whicli it v^-as created, far exceed- ing the hopes and aspirations of its most sanguine founders. It was with much regret that the organization yielded to the call for a larger field of service and on January i6, 1913, founded the Department Club. At that time there were twenty-five active members, sixteen honorary members, representing nine states, and four who had gone to their final reward. On March 5, each year, the Cycle comes together in reunion. Those who cannot come in person respond by letter. The Cycle will live in the hearts of a devoted membership until time has so depleted its ranks that its useful career becomes a mere matter of history. Presidents of the organization were : Mrs. S. H. Morris, Miss Hannah Baker, Miss Sadie Baker, Mrs. Jessie Moore Serf¥, Mrs. W. W. Bonner. Mrs. Fannie Wooden Moss, Mrs. Mollie Zoller Lewis, Mrs. Jeessie Hart Woodfill, Mrs. J. K. Ewing, Mrs. Sam Covert. Mrs. Clara Lambert Miller, Miss Vessie Riley, Miss Pearl Williams, Mrs. J. F. Goodard. THE mothers' circle. The Mothers' Circle was organized about 1901 by Mrs. Cortez Ewing. It was first known as the Mothers' Prayer Circle. Its object was to discuss topics such as would be helpful to mothers with young children. A few of the charter members were: ]\Irs. Cortez Ewing, iMrs. Joe Alexander, Mrs. Alex. Porter, Mrs. Oscar Miller, Mrs. Dr. E. B. Crowell, Mrs. Edward Hizer, Mrs. John Hofer, Mrs. Wayne McCoy and Mrs. George W. Bird. The meetings were most informal, not having any regular program, Ijut many heart-to-heart talks, which all enjoyed thoroughly and did lasting good to those who participated in them. The meetings were held once each month in 334 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. the homes of the different meniliers. lixery meeting was opened witli Scriptin-e reading and sentence prayer, in wiiich almost e\ery member took part, also \'ery delicate refreshments were served. In igo6 the circle was reorganized and a constitution and hy-laws were adopted. Mrs. Rena Gilchrist was elected president, and Mrs. Xellie Bird, secretary. A program committee consisting of Mrs. Elsi Dunaway, Mrs. Olive Gilham and Mrs. Alice Welch, was also elected. Xeat programs were prepared and such subjects as "Family Loyalty to God," "Books for Chil- dren," "Patriotism," "The Ideal ^Mother, " "Temperance," and "Character Building," were among the many subjects discussed. These programs were continued, with tlie different members being elected to the dift'erent offices each year. In i\larch, 1913, after much hesitation, the circle \-oted to enter the Department Club. The meetings were continued in much the same manner, with additional members. The circle will continue their meetings in the same manner durmg the year 1915-1916, with IMrs. Ray Hamilton as chairman, Mrs. Bert Gilham, vice-chairman, and ]Mrs. E. M. Beck, secretary-treasurer. THE PROGRESS CLUB. The Progress Club was organized on October 2, 1863, according to its constitution, for "promotion of intellectual and social growth." Its first ofificers and other charter members were: Miss Edith Patten, president; Miss Delle IMcLaughlin, vice-president: Miss Edith Hamilton, secretary; Miss Ethel Bartholomew, treasurer: Misses Emma Donnell, Terressa Elmore, Clara Robison, Blanche McLaughlin, Myrta Patton, Bessie Donnell, Hannah Evans, Martha Evans, Ida Hollen.sbe, Helen Rankin and Jean Ran- kin. The organization now has twenty-fi\e members and ele\en honorarv members. It meets regularly on the second and fourth Tuesdays of each month and the program is always an interesting and important part of each session, although the social feature is prominent. The program is usually a part of some special course of study. Many social functions are given by the clul), delightful informal affairs, although occasionally there are more pretentious ones. Lasting benefits have been derived by its members from study and research work, and it has estab- lished a closer bond of friendship in the entire city. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 335 Memliers are, man)- of them, high scliool grackiates and liave had the advantages of higher education and travel. The club's present officers are: Miss Cora Donnell, president; Miss Emma Donnell. vice-president: Miss Winifred Newhouse, secretary, and Miss Hazel Scott, treasurer. THE woman's club. The Woman's Club was organized on January 31, 1893, for "social and intellectual culture." By constitutional provisions, its membership was lim- ited to twenty. Its first officers were : Mrs. J. H. Alexander, president ; Miss Julia F. Cooke, \'ice-president : Mrs. R. C. Hamilton, secretary, and Mrs. Joseph Davison, treasurer. After twenty pleasant and profitable years, dur- ing which it maintained a high standard of literary work, the organization disbanded in 1913, and was merged into the Department Club. THE TOURIST CLUB. In the early days of club life in Greensburg, there was organized the first literary club for both ladies and gentlemen. It was on the evening of October i, 1894, at the home of Judge F. E. Gavin, that this, the Tourist Club, was started. Throughout the subsequent years, until the recent merg- ing of all the literary cIuIjs of Greensburg into the great Department Club, the Tourist Club was a li\e organization in the literary circles of the city. Prof. W. P. Shannon was the president, and among the charter mem- bers were: Prof, and Mrs. W. P. Shannon, Judge and Mrs. F. E. Gavin, Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Silberberg, Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Morris, Mr. and Mrs. Cortez Ewing, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dowden, Judge John D. Miller, Mr. Harry Lathrop, Mr. Oscar G. Miller, Miss :Martha Miller, Miss Margaret Lathrop and Miss Clara Lambert. The imaginary journeys of the club, to all quarters of the globe, both far and near, brought both profit and pleasvire — profit by way of prepara- tion for subse(|uent real journeys and pleasure, by way of promoting the closer ties of friendship. The personnel of the club shifted with the changing years, but always composed a band of Greensburg's most interesting citizens. At the time the club entered the Department Club, two years ago, but two of the charter members still belonged, namely : Oscar G. and Clara Lambert Miller. 336 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. THE FORTNIGHTLY CLUB. For the purpose of research along the hne of hterature, history and art. the T'ortniglitly Ckib' was organized in 1894. with Clara Ardery, Lottie Dickerson Dobyns, Jessie Donnell Erdmann, Kate Emmert, Bertie Hitchell Morgan, Myrtle Hollensbee Hamilton, Annette Miller Davidson, Anna Monfort. Glenn Montgomery Russell, Clara Russell Mills, Cora Sefton Robbins, Kate Stewart, Mar}' Thomson and Cora Zoller Davidson as charter members. The membership has grown until at the present time (1915) it includes thirty names. The names of Clara Russell Mills, Nell Donnell Erdman, Annette Miller Davidson, Bessie Montfort and Kate Rogers Crawford, who have departed from this world, are held in sacred remembrance by the club members. For the last four years, Mrs. Demarchus Brown, of Indianapolis, has lectured before the club. When the Depart- ment Club was organized in 19 13, the individual members of the Fortnightly Club entered that organization and the literary work of the later organiza- tion was dropped. Since that time it has existed simply as a social club. The officers for 1915 were: Mrs. Harry Mount, president; ]\Irs. J. C. Alex- ander, vice-president ; Mrs. Van W'oodfill, secretary, and Kate Stewart, treasurer. THE RESEARCH CLUE, On the 23rd of February, 1909, at the home of the late Mrs. Nettie Sampson Dils, was formed the Research Club. The purpose of the club, as set forth in its constitution, was intellectual and social growth. With this ever in luind, its programs and lueetings were rich in value and interest. Mrs. Dils was the inspiring genius of the little group and her memory is held by the members of the club with tender re\-erence. Throughout the organization she was the gentle censor that molded its purpose. As a tribute to the honor and esteem in which she was held, she was chosen its first president. To aid her, Mrs. Ella Long Doles was chosen vice-presi- dent; Mrs. Ada Richardson Porter, corresponding secretary; Mrs. IMinnie Ketchum Porter, recording secretary, and Mrs. Ella Hittle Christian, treas- urer. A membership committee, of Mrs. Ollie Dickey Gilham, Mrs. Ada Richardson Porter and Mrs. Nelle McKee Kercheval, and a program com- mittee, of Mrs. Ollie Rogers Donnell, Mrs. Nettie Sampson Dils, Mrs. Ella Long Doles, Mrs. Ada Richardson Porter and Mrs. Ella Hittle Christian, were appointed. The list of original members included Terressa Arderv, DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 337 Mary Ardery, Annie Rouse Bird, Ella Hittle Christian, Eula Christian, Net- tie Sampson Dils, Ella Long Doles, Ollie Rogers Donnell, Ruby Doyle Eward, Ollie Dickey Gilham, Nelle Drake Hazelrigg, Maude Kitchin John- ston, Rose Moffett Kessing, Nelle McKee Kercheval, Fannie Wood Nord- meyer, Ada Richardson Porter, Minnie Ketchum Porter, Edith Patton, Katie Sefton Robbins, Grace VanBuskirk, Delia Mount Wooden and Mary Wood Weaver. The club held thirteen very instructive meetings at the homes of its members during the first year of its existence. During the second year, from September, 1910, to May, 191 1, Edith Patton acted as president, with Mary Ardery as vice-president, Mrs. Rose MofTet Kessing as corresponding secretary, Mrs. Olive Dickey Gilham as recording secretary and Mrs. Maude Kitchin Johnston as treasurer. This year's membership list included the name of Mary Snodgrass Wallingford. The next year saw Anna Albrecht Meek, Eleanor Eich Lowe, Sallie Wright Weaver and Pearl Kitchin WoodfiU as new members, and the fol- lowing officers served : Mrs. Annie Rouse Bird, president ; Mrs. Mary Wood U'eaver, vice-president : Mrs. Fannie Wood Nordmeyer, corresponding secretary ; Mrs. Ruby Doyle Eward, recording secretary, and Mrs. Nell Drake Hazelrigg, treasurer. The year 1912-1913, saw the last of the Research Club as an independ- ent organization, as about that time it was incorporated into the Depart- ment Club. Mrs. Ada Richardson Porter was president this last year, and Mrs. Terressa Lowe .\rdery. vice-president : Mrs. Delia Mount Wooden, cor- responding secretary ; Eula Christian, recording secretary, and Mrs. Nona Eich Lowe, treasurer. This year's membership shows the new name of Louise Fogel Baker. THE LITERARY CLUB OF I9I4. The Ladies' Literary Club of 1914 was organized, as the name indicates, in the year 19 14. Its first meeting was held on February 20, at the home of Mrs. Clara Talbott. In the beginning the club consisted of eighteen mem- bers, with Mrs. Ella Christian, president; Mrs. Sarah Wooden and Mrs. Maggie WoodfiU, vice-presidents ; Mrs. Mary Stegmaier, secretary : Mrs. Mattie Rucker, treasurer, and Mrs. Mary Bracken, sponsor. The purpose of the club was to promote a love of knowledge, the first motto being, "The love of knowledge cometli with reading and grows upon us." The pro- grams were of a miscellaneous character and broadening in their effect. One (22) 338 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. of the strong features of tlie club's work is its social life. The love among the members was of the Jonathan and David type and when an invitation came to become a member of the Department Club — to amalgamate with the other clubs of the city and thereby lose its identity — the Club of 1914 pro- tested. The old ties could not be broken. And when at last it submitted to the ine\-ital>le, a unanimous vote was cast for a semi-annual meetings of the members, that the social life might never die, and so in spirit it lives on. Of the original members, those holding membership to the last were: Mrs. Nellie Donnell. Mrs. E. H. Lambert, Mrs. Fannie Nordmeir. Mrs. Anna Pleak, Mrs. Mattie Rucker, Mrs. Sarah Wooden and Mrs. Maggie Wood- fill. THE MARRIED L.\DIES' MUSICALE. The first musical club of Greensburg was known as the Married Ladies' Musicale, and was organized in the fall of 1889, with about twenty mem- bers. Recognizing the need of some plan to preserve the musical talent of the busy home-makers of Greensburg, Mrs. Milton F. Parsons inxited a number of musical ladies to her home, and suggested the plan and line of work which she thought would prove helpful, not only to the individual members, but, by elevating the musical taste of the public, to the city as well. The idea was enthusiastically received, and an organization at once effected. Mrs. Parsons was made the first president. Under her efficient leader- ship, the work was so well launched, that the membership and interest in- creased from year to year. The Married Ladies' Musicale gave many concerts in Greensburg, and furnished the music for many public occasions, one of the greatest being the dedicatory service of the Odd Fellows home. Those who served as presiding officers were Mrs. Milton F. Parsons, Mrs. J. K. Ewing, Mrs. Jessie Moore, Mrs. \V. W. Bonner, Mrs. J. Bracken, Mrs. R. W. Montgomery, Mrs. David Silverberg, Mrs. W. C. Woodfill, Mrs. Frank Bennett, Mrs. Curtis Kendall, Mrs. Charles Stegmier, Mrs. Frank Batterton, Mrs. Setli Donnell, Mrs. R. M. Thomas and Mrs. Cassius Hamilton, who was the last presiding officer. In 1913 this organ- ization disbanded to become a part of the Department Club. THE CECILIANS. During the winter of 1897, Prof. Charles Hansen, of Indianapolis, was instructing a class in pipe organ in Greensburg, and to him some voung ladies DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 339 expressed the desire for a musical club. He heartily approved the desire, offered his aid to the purpose, and on February i8, 1897, met with a num- ber of young ladies in the Presbyterian church for the purpose of forming a club to study the masters and their works. After much discussion, the club was organized, bearing the name, The Cecilian. The officers chosen were : President, Stella Murphy ; vice-president, Pearl A. Williams ; treasurer, Nona Eich ; assistant treasurer, Cora Zoller, and secretary, Riena Stevens. The Misses Delia Mount, Ina Cox and Bertie Mitchell were appointed to draft a constitution and set of by-laws. The decision was reached to have miscellaneous programs, alternating with programs given to the study of some composer and his work. The first regular meeting was held with Miss Cora Zoller, on March 4, 1897, Professor Hansen having charge of the program. He gave a lec- ture on the development of music, with illustrations on the piano, using the familiar air of "Johnny Smoker," playing it in the styles peculiar to Bach, Handel, Mozart, Haydn, Beethoven and Schumann. For a time no organization better fulfilled its purpose. The work accomplished was a delight to both performers and listeners. The chorus work, under Miss Claribel Winchester, is indelibly stamped on the memories of the members. For several seasons meetings were held in the auditorium of the 'First Methodist Episcopal church, with associate members as audi- ences. Guest day recitals were eagerly looked forward to by all the lovers of music in the community. Profitable courses of study were included in the work of the organization as well as bringing artists to the city as an inspiration to higher music culture. The Cecilians put forth many efforts for music advancement in the county, one of which was the editing a news- paper column under the heading "Music Notes." The last officers serving the organization were : Eula Christian, presi- dent; Ethel Watson, vice-president; Mrs. D. A. Meyers, secretary; Pearl A. Williams, corresponding secretary, and Worth Stewart, treasurer. The last membership enrollment contained the names of Vivian Baylor, Mrs. P. C. Bentle, Eula Christian. Mrs. Earl Crooks, Mrs. George Diewart, Emma Donnell, Mrs. Guy Guthrie, Ivate Haas, Alice Haas, Clara Hamilton, Mrs. Earl Hite, Emma Hitchell, Vina Knowles, Mrs. Walter Kirby, Ruth Kam- merling, Mrs. Arthur Lowe, Stella Murphy, Mrs. Bart McLaughlin, Mrs. D. A. Myers, Mayme O'Hare, Nellie Rigby, Stella Stagg, Florine Meek, Mrs. Bert Morgan, Emma Stout, Marguerite Shannon, Worth Stewart, Mrs. Paul Tindall, Pearl A. Williams, Ethel Watson, Mrs. E. E. Wooden, Mabel Welsh, Mrs. Robert Woodfill, Louise Ehlers and Mrs. Edward Owens. 340 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. The names of the deceased members, Ohve Smyth, ^Mrs. Roxy Thornburg Eward and Mrs. Adahne Zoller Ansted, will ever be held in remembrance. The Cecilians, realizing the value of the Department Club, became ardent promoters, and today many of its members are enrolled in the music study circle. THE ATHEN.\EUM. The Athenaeum, a literary society organized in the spring of 1912. was founded by a group of men, all then in Greensburg, who were interested generally in literature, and was designed for more serious work in research and writing. It held some important meetings before some of its members removed from Greensburg, at which some work of permanent value was produced. The society was limited in membership .to ten men, as follow : B. F. Bennett, C. W. Bare. Dr. Charles R. Bird, John F. Goddard, E. L. Grover, Lewis A. Harding, E. C. Jerman, John \V. Rhodes, F. D. Townsley and Dr. D. W. Weaver. The society maintained its activities for one good year, 1912-1913, and during that time the following men served as its officers: D. W. Weaver, president: E. C. Jerman, vice-president: and John W. Rhodes, secretary- treasurer. The following program of work was presented by the society to the membership and invited guests during the year : "The Preliminary Diplomacy of the Spanish-American War," Lewis A. Harding: "Child Philo- sophy," Prof. C. W. Bare; "Medicine in Shakespeare," Dr. Charles R. Bird; "The Kinetick Theory of Matter," Prof. F. D. Townsley; "The Lawyer's Interpretation of 'The Merchant of Venice'," John F. Goddard ; "Right Thinking," Dr. D. W. Weaver; "Plant Breeding — Mendel's Law and Appli- cation," Prof. E. L. Grover; "The Dynamic Force of Human Development," Prof. E. C. Jerman: "The Short Story," John W. Rhodes: "The Jury Sys- tem," B. F. Bennett. This society represented perhaps the most serious effort at research and writing ever attempted in an organized way by a literary organization at Greensburg. The members tackled big subjects. Of Mr. Harding's work on "The Preliminary Diplomacy of the Spanish-American War," Dr. Amos Hershey, professor of political science and international law in Indiana Llni- versity, says "it will be of interest and value to students of American his- tory. " CHAPTER Xlir. THE MEDICAL PROFESSION. There have been physicians in Decatur county from its earhest organ- ization, and in the ninety-three years which ha\'e elapsed since its creation there have been hundreds of physicians who have practiced in the county for varying lengths of time. Few of the early doctors had college train- ing, but they seem to have successfully combated the "fever an' ager" and such complaints as were common among the pioneers. The old-time doctor was a man of wonderful versatility. He could bring the new-born child into the world, christen the babe or comfort the mother if the child failed to live. He could formulate a will or dictate a codicil and, in a case of necessity, could act as a Ia^vyer for his patients. His medicines were largely manu- factured by himself from medicinal plants which he gathered in the neigh- boring woods. These home-made remedies, together with c|uinine and calo- mel, constituted practically the extent of the pioneer doctor's supply of remedial agents. It is not certain who was the first physician in Decatur county, but it is know that Mrs. Justus Rich practiced medicine in Greensburg as early as 1 82 1 or 1822. Other early physicians were Conduit, Gillespie, Hartley, Teal, Lyman and Stubinger. These were followed by Drs. Joshua Poole, John Richey, Frederick Fogg and Abram Carter, these four coming at various periods between 1835 and 1840. Doctor Carter had practiced in Clinton township for several years previous to this. About 1840, Dr. William Armington, a nati\e of Saratoga county, Xew York, located in Greensburg, after having practiced for a short time in Switzerland county, Indiana. He was probably the leading physician of the county until the time of his death, February 24, 1862. Another able phy- sician who settled here about the same time as did Dr. Armington was Dr. John \y. Moody, a native of Pennsylvania, who practiced in the county until his death in 1867. There was perhaps no more popular physician in the county than Doctor Moody, and in the treatment of acute diseases he made a reputation which was not confined to the county. Other physicians set- tling in Greensburg before the Civil War were Drs. George \V. New, E. 342 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. B. Swem, Xewberry Wheeldon and John W'heeldon. Doctor Strong is said to have been the first physician at Clarksburg, although Doctor Gillespie, who later moved to Greensburg". was the first physician in Fugit township. Other early physicians of Fugit township were. Doctors Wiley, Weed, Hughes and Hopkins. According to the 1882 atlas, there had been or were practicing at that time in the various townships of the county the following physicians : Adams township, Drs. Ritchey, R. J. Depew, U. G. Reeves, W. H. Webb, Floyd Connett, Lewis, Cook, Armstrong, Underwood, Shipman and Howard; Clav township, Drs. W. E. Crawford, Lewis McAllister, John Ritchey, St. John, Hawk, James O'Byrne. William A. and Joseph Ardery, A. L. Under- wood, George F. Chittenden, J. W. Martin, John Craig, J. L. Wooden, E. W. Leech, U. G. Reeves, J. H. Alexander and George S. Crawford : Fugit township, Drs. Nathaniel Lewis, S. C. Foster, Robert H. Crawford, Bell & Roberts, Burk, Cain, Thomas Johnson and J. L. Smith (other practicing physicians of Fugit township have been previously mentioned ) ; Jackson township, Drs. William and D. B. Davis, S. W. Ryker, Austin Marlow, William Hanna, N. E. Charlton. D. Owens, J. W. Allison, William F. and J. H. S. Reiley and Biddinger; Sand Creek township, Drs. Schultz, Conwell, McCullough, Pottinger, Sparks, Van Horn, J. P. Burroughs, William Hause, Michael Daily and J. V. Schofield (two of these physicians, Bur- roughs and Hause, were surgeons in the Civil War) ; Marion township, Drs. Lutz, S. B. Hitt, Hammond. Frank Daily and Reamy ; Salt Creek township, Drs. Pennington, Price. Pye, McConnell, Floyd and Dowden ; Washington township, Drs. J. L. Armington, George Armington, William Bracken, L. C. Bunker. J. L. and W. H. W'ooden, M. G. Falconberry, J. Y. and S. B. Hitt, C. A. Covert, J. C. Humphries, J. W. Craig, Samuel Maguire, S. V. Wright, Samuel Cook, A. A. Armington, J. C. French, R. D. Homsher, John H. Bobbitt and D. L. Scobey. Presumably all these practiced in Greensburg. An act of the Legislature in 1885 provided for the registration in each county of all the physicians practicing therein, and the subsequent list exhibits the names of all the physicians registered in Decatur county since that year. The lengthy list of 1885 gives not only those who were admitted to practice that year, but also all those who had been practicing previously to that vear. 1885 — Frank H. Snedeker. Thomas Johnson, John H. Bobbitt, George E. Clark, G. Tassfeld Ruby, John W. Parker, Samuel V. Wright, George S. Crawford, William Bracken, Cornelius Cain, John H. Alexander, C. M. Beall, John L. Smith, Mordecia B. Mobly, A. A. Armington, J. Y. Hitt, John DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 343 L. Wooden, Alphanso Armstrong-, Francis M. Howard, J. W. Howard, William H. Wooden, S. B. Hitt, Benjamin S. White, Samuel Maguire, Eli Pennington, L. C. Bunker. J. W. Selman, Daniel L. Scobey, William F. Reiley, J. H. S. Reiley, D. J. Ballard, Alfred S. Remy, W. A. McCoy, Mil- ford G. Falconbury, R. M. Thomas, Londa W. D. Jemian, Minton C. Vest, J. V. Schofield, F. M. Daily, E. B. Swem, J. H. Leatherman, William Hause, Richard J. Depew, J. B. Kirkpatrick, J. B. Bracken, Erastus E. Fads, Bart Fitzpatrick, James T. Burroughs, Samuel Pagin, Thomas J. Clark, Cornelius A. Covert, Austin Marlow, George W. Godfrey, Conrad Mauser, S. W. Biddinger, Wesley GofY. 1886— James L. Tevis. W. H. Webb, William G. Butler. Robert D. Homsher, T. E. F. Miller, John C. Hicks, James S. Shields, Berry Painter, Lewis C. McFatridge. 1887 — Alvin L. Bailey, W. S. Tingley, John F. Rodgers, Samuel C. Thomas, Simeon Stapp, J. K. Smalley, A. Southworth. Thomas B. Gullefer, B. M. White. I. B. Hettinger. 1888 — Sam H. Riley, James Monroe ^^"oods. Myron H. Williams, John M. Tobias, Hiram B. Wray. 1889 — Alva M. Kirkpatrick, E. W. Leech, Frank H. Rorick, Orion K. Thomson, E. W. Leech. Frank H. Rorick. W. O. Coffee, Amos W. Dowden, Samuel Salisbury. 1890 — Dr. E. J. Price, Charles H. Bogmann, L. P. Walter, Fernando A. Grant. 1891 — John W^immer, Henry Johnston. 1892 — James R. Jacks. 1893 — Mary Hobbs Iredals. Sanford E. Givan, Mrs. Carrie Branden- burg, Charles Westley Brandenburg. 1894 — Condie Butler Beck. 1895 — Eden T. Riley. Charles Gilchrist, Elton Baker Crowell. 1896 — Isaac Dunn, Frank E. Autcn. D. W. Weaver, Ira Witten San- ders, Charles B. Jeffers. George McDonnell Ober. 1897 — Charles Leslie Howard, Daniel J. Ballard, William Bracken, John H. Alexander. John H. Bobbitt, L. W. D. Jerman. T. B. Gullifer, R. M. Thomas. D. W. Weaver, Eden T. Riley, L. E. Bunker, S. E. Givan, Thomas Johnson, Henry Johnson, A\'illiam Hause, John M. Tobias, J. V. Schofield, I. I\L Sanders. J. M. Wood, C. A. Covert, Samuel Wright, Myron H. Williams, B. S. White, J. Y. Hitt. E. B. Crowell, C. M. Beall, John W. Parker. Milton C. Vest. C. L. Howard, J. H. D. Lorimor, W. H. Web. T. E. F. Miller, Thomas J. Clark. G. S. Crawford. Wm. H. Wooden. Condie 344 DECATUR COUXTY, INDIANA. B. Beck, John L. Smith, 5. B. Hitt, Francis M. Daily, J. H. S. Riley, George E. Denny, F. M. Howard, J. W. Howard, G. D. Dorremus, I. T. Burroughs, J. M. Boyer, Oliver F. Welsh, C. B. Grover. 1898— A. B. Morris, Harriet C. D. Wilson, William L. Wilson, William Warner, Clarence Fay Kercheval, O. K. Thomson. i899_R. T. Gephart, T. A. Welch, \\'illiam J. Flatfield. 1900 — J. B. Crisler, Loren A. Hyde. 1901 — Ezra H. Pleak, W. E. Thomas, Harry N. Oldliam, John Robert Love, M. A. Tremain. 1902 — Charles W. Pagel, George WcOber, J. B. Kinsinger, Leroy M. Comyer, Jesse W. Rucker. 1903 — Herman Essex, Hiram M. Johnson, Warren D. Scott, William Edgar Thomas. 1904 — John Curtis Hill, Charles Lafayette Williams, Clement L. Canada, H. E. Wilcox, Charles W. Pagel, J. W. Shrout, Clyde C. Morrison. 1905 — John Francis Duckworth. 1905 — Harry Gilbert Fleming, F. K. ^Vesthafter, John ^^'. Bell, Curtis Bland. 1906 — Thomas J. Martin, P. C. Bentle, Charles R. Bird. 1907 — William B. McKinstry, Jacob C. Glass, Charles Wood, John Curtis Hill, Harley S. ]\IcKee, H. E. Wilcox, John O. Carver. 1908 — Edward A. Porter, Charles H. Weaver, Clarence W. ^lullikin, William G. French, John FL S. Riley. 1909 — Nicholas C. Bauman, Charles D. .\llison, .Andrew Robison, J. E. Curtis, C. S. Bolender. 1910 — Carl D. Jewett, John H. S. Riley. 191 1 — Charles W. Pagel, Clyde C. Morrison, Prosser E. Clark. 1912 — Dilber- E. Douglas, Paul R. Tindall, Carl Y. Carlewysbeane, Cecil G. Harrod. 1913 — George J. Martz, Gewase C. Flick. 1914 — William R. Turner. 191 5 — Joseph Coomes, Louis D. Robertson. The editor of this volume has been very fortunate in securing the ser\'ices of Dr. John IL .Alexander, one of the oldest jshysicians of Decatur county, to write brief sketches of the most prominent deceased physicians of the countv. For the sake of reference they are arranged in alphabetical order: DI'ZCATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 345 SOMK rilYSICIANS OF DF.CATUR COUNTY. By J, H. Alexander, M. D. Dr. Joseph C. Ardery was born in Decatur county, Indiana, in 1825, and died, from a congestive cliill, in Harts\ille, in 1854. He was one of the four delegates from Decatur county to the convention that met in InchanapoHs, June 6, 1849, to organize a state meeUcal society. He probably was a member of the Decatur County Medical Society, organized January 25, 1847, two years before the state society was organized. His postoffice was Milford until a short time before his death. He must have been a very popular physician, as he was often referred to and ((uoted by his former patrons in Clay town- ship fifty years after his death. He died before he reached his thirtieth year. Dr. William ,\rdery, whose name is among the members of the medical society organized on January 25, 1847, in Decatur county, resided on a farm northeast of Greensburg. Dr. John L. Armington, younger larother of Dr. William Armington, came from Switzerland cuunty, Indiana, to Greensburg in 1841 or 1842. He entered into partnership with his brother and practiced in this county fourteen years. He was a member of the Decatur County Medical Society, also a dele- gate to the convention held at Indianapolis, on June 6, 1849, to organize a state medical society — the State Medical Association. Drs. Joseph C. Ardery, John W. Moody and George W. New were also delegates from Decatur county. Doctor Armington removed from this county prior to 1858. Dr. William Armington was born in Saratoga county. New York, in 1808, and died on February 24, 1862. He came to Switzerland county, Indi- ana, in 1829, and practiced there until in 1840, he removed to Decatur county, where he continued in practice until shortly before his death. He was a very successful physician. In politics, he was a Democrat. Probably he was not a mem])er of an}' church, though i)Ossil:)ly a Methodist. He was a moral and exemplary man : a good citizen : neat in apparel ; liked to talk medicine and was always instructive and entertaining. His advice to one doctor was, "When you don't know what to do, give calomel." He surely was a calomel doctor. He belie\-ed in blood-letting, as was common at that time in cer- tain conditions. He was a safe and discreet consultant. Doctor Arming- ton's name is among the members of the Decatur County Medical Society, organized on January 25, 1847. He was a member of Greensburg Lodge No. 36, Free and Accepted Masons. In an obituary in the Decatur Republican, published in Greensburg, we find the following tribute from his lodge : 346 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. "His labors have been imlefatigaljle, and success, corresponding, his skill and knowledge are known and acknowledged by all. To relieve suffer- ing has been the leading oliject of his life. ^Vherever the sufferer was he was ever ready to go, whether among the rich or poor, among the noble or ignoble. A man of mark — in whatever department he acted with his fellow- man — he was made for a ruler. His own clear intellect and varied attain- ments rendered him prominent in the comnnmity. Unpretending, yet com- manding, such position was ne\'er sought, Init always attained. But while yet in the midst of usefulness to his family and community, he has been reniiixcd by death, and the li\ing have a legacv in his character and dis- charge a last duty to him by conveying his body to that narrow house to which all the living are hastening; therefore, "Resolved, That, as a lodge, we attentl the funeral of our deceased brother, to testify our high esteem for him as a man and a ]\Iason, and to assure those of his immediate family that they ha\'e our heart-felt sympathy. "Resoh'ed, That in the character of our deceased brother we recognize the accomplished physician, the intelligent and honorable gentleman, the de\'oted husband and father, as well as a much esteemed and consistent man. "B. \V. Wilson, "J. B. L.ATHROP, "P. EWING, "Committee. "George M. Collins, Secretary." His reinains rest in South Park Cemetery, beside his two wives, several sons and other members of his family. Sam C. Bartholomew was a member of the Decatur County Medical Society, organized on January 2^. 1847, but no other history of him can be found. Dr. \Mlliam Bracken, a noted physician and esteemed resident of Greens- burg since 1862, was born near Valley Junction, Dearborn county, Indiana, May 26, 181 7. His parents, Thomas and Matilda (Coen) Bracken, removed with their family to Rush county, Indiana, in 182 1. In 1834, when only seventeen }-ears old, young Bracken began the study of medicine with Drs. H. C. Sexton and W. H. Alartin. in Rushville. Being a persistent student and eager for knowledge, his ac(|uirements soon ga\'e him claim to an exam- ination and license for the practice of medicine. Medical colleges at that day were not available to many, but a pro\'ision, as substitute for them, was the district board of censors, to whom by state law, w^as given the privilege to DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 347 examine and license to practice medicine such as desired it. Young Bracken, being recommended, appeared before the censors of the fifth medical dis- trict, passed his examinations successfully and received his license, which read as follows : "We, therefore, ha\'e licensed William Bracken to practice as a phy- sician and surgeon, with all the rights and privileges and honors thereonto appertaining, and we do recommend him to the faculty and the patronage of the public. "Done at Connersville, Indiana, November 2, 1836, the year of Amer- ican independence the sixty-first. "Witness our hands and the seal of the society affixed. "John M. Rowland, Prcs., [Seal.] "Ryland T. Brown, Sec." Dr. John M. Howland was the father-in-law of Dr. John W. Moody, of Greensburg. He was a prominent physician of the day and a graduate of the University of Maryland, in 1819. Dr. Ryland J. Brown was a graduate of the Ohio Medical College, at Cincinnati, class of 1829. He was state geologist in 1854 and professor of natural science in Northwestern Christian University, at Indianapolis, in 1858. He was an author and a man (if mark and unusual acquirements. Doctor Bracken, within si.xty days after receiving his authority to practice medicine, removed to a small village in Jackson county, remaining there but a short time. It seems he had plenty of malaria and practice, and but little pay. Returning to Rush county, he located at Richland, and later at Milroy. In 1862 he removed to Greensburg. On November g, 1S37, Doctor Bracken was married to Patience A. Berry, of Rush county, and to this union there were born four sons and one daughter. Mrs. Bracken died on April 18, 1898, in Greensburg. Mrs. Martha Rucker is the only survivor of the family. In 1850, while a resident of Rush county. Doctor Bracken was elected a delegate to the constitutional con\ention of Indiana and was the last sur- viving member. For the advancement of his chosen profession he was always a willing worker. He was an active member in the county medical society, and very seldom absent from its meetings. When Doctor Bracken spoke, the mem- bers present always "sat up and took notice," as he always said something — though not always according to conceded points or opinions. He was some- times aggressive, but defended, with ability, authorities cited or his personal 348 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. experience given to sustain his position. Doctor Bracken was a good diag- nostician, a close obserxer. did his own thinking and formed his own opinions a;nd conclusions. In the sick room he acted, and knew why he did so. He had confidence in himself. He was president of the Decatur County Med- ical Society several years. In later years he let those who experimented with new remedies lead, and, when tested and proven, was ready to approve and use them. Doctor Bracken was one of the first secretaries of the county board of health as now organized. The last time Doctor Bracken met with the count\- societv, he was called on to address the members then present. His remarks were almost entirely reminescent, as a pioneer physician, relating to the hardships, dan- gers, difficulties, doubts and trials of these physicians, which were described with trembling voice, sometimes with sadness, again animated with the i)ride of victory and success. Some of the older physicians present had similar experience, while the younger were surprised and perhaps skeptical. In those days visits were necessarily made on horseback, with saddle bags to carry his armamentarium of herbs, roots, barks, etc., (iften to be prepared at the bedside as infusions. There were no granular tablets or fluid extracts in those days. Doctor Bracken had always been a Democrat. He belie\ed in govern- ment by the people, for the people. He was a IMason and for many )'ears was worshipful master of Greensburg Lodge Xo. ;^6. which had charge of the burial ceremony. .\n incident in the life of Doctor Bracken is probably proper to relate here. He was devoted to his profession, lodge, church and other duties, and not disposed to sacrifice any of them to the requirements of society. Dressing reluctantly for a function of this kind, he said to his wife, "Mother, I would rather ride ten miles than go." A call at the door gave him the opportunity to miss the party and see the patient, sure enough ten miles away. A ride through the cold dark night, letting down fences, wandering across fields with doubts as to his course, he finally arrived at his destination, to be detained several hours to relieve a patient in distress. Later, the doctor said that while he had failed to meet his friends at the party, the satisfaction of having relieved pain and suffering and saved a life more than recompensed him and that he would do it again under similar circum- stances. Dr. L. C. Bunker was born in Cayuga county, New York, on October 21, 1 82 1. His parents moved to Oberlin, Ohio, when he was a small lad. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 349 and went from there to Branch county, Michigan, in 1833. Later they set- tled in Boone county, Indiana, and in 1848 located in Ripley county. While in Michigan, L. C. Bunker had the unusual experience of associating him- self with an Indian tribe and in two years became quite intimate with Indian life and lore, being able to converse intellii^ently with the red men of the Michigan wilderness. At the breaking out of the Mexican war, in 1846, he enlisted in the second Illinois Regiment, that joined Taylor's army and marched to the city of Mexico. He began the study of medicine in 1845. in the ollice of Doctor Wright, at Belvidere. Illinois, and after his return from the war, he took a course of lectures in the Rush Medical College, in Chicago; in 1852, he graduated from the Eclectic Medical College in Cin- cinnati, Ohio. After practicing several years in Ripley county, he removed to Greensburg in 1865. Doctor Bunker married Alvira E. Alden, of Ripley county, on Novem- ber 15, 1849. Eight children were born, five of whom sur\'ive: Mrs. Lucy E. Montgomery, of Chattanooga, Tennesee; Henry A., a physician of New York city; George, engaged in business in Dover, Delaware: Mrs. May Wise, of Brooklyn, New York, and Arthur Clifford, an electrician, of Mount Clair, New Jersey. One son, William, a physician at W^inston, Illinois, died in 1892. Doctor Bunker's first wife 'died some twenty-five years ago, and, on April 5, 1899, he married Mrs. Ida V. McElvain. Doctor Bunker practiced medicine more than fifty-three years in Rip- ley and Decatur counties. He was a very successful physician and surgeon and kept up with the advanced knowledge of the profession. His former patrons speak with commendation of his care for the interest and comfort of his patients — always attentive, kind and sympathetic. Doctor Bunker was a member of the Baptist church and when possible an attendant at the services of the church. He died on his farm near Greensburg, on August 26, 1907, and his remains rest in South Park cemetery. Dr. Cornelius Cain was born on August i, 1808, near Dover, Delaware, and died on June 28, 1903, in this county, at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Orlando Hamilton. His father settled in Brookville, Franklin countv, about 1827. Doctor Cain studied medicine with Dr. Rufus Haymond, in Brook- ville. He began the practice of medicine at Laurel, and in 1857 he removed to Clarksburg, Decatur county. He was married to Eliza Clements in 1836. To them were born ten children, of whom seven lived to rear families. Two sons, Albert and John, are Methodist preachers. Albert resides in New Jersey, and John is in the North Indiana conference. Homer was engaged in business and died in Knoxville, Tennessee, in 1893. Another 350 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. son, Elmer Ellswcirth, wlio was a teaclier, died in 1890. The daughters were Mrs. Orlando Hamilton, Nancy, the widow of F. M. Smith, living at Muncie, and Mrs. Emma Bell, living at Upland. Doctor Cain continued in practice from 1857 to 1898, forty-one years, in Clarksburg, when he retired to reside with his daughter, Mrs. Orlando Hamilton, near Kingston, where he lived until his death. Doctor Cain was a frequent attendant at the Decatur County Medical Society. He often reported cases in minute detail, showing that he was a close observer and good diagnostician. He reported several cases of colitis (dysentery) treated with castor oil and tincture of opium successfully, which was not the usual treatment at that day, neither was the treatment in \ogue nearly so successful as his. Dr. Aljram Carter came from Kentucky to Greensburg prior to 1847, and was present at the organization of perhaps the first medical society nn January 25, 1847. His daughter was the wife of Dr. George W. New, sur- geon of a regiment of Indiana volunteers. She was a very efficient nurse and was with her husband during his service, being a great favorite with the members of the regiment. Doctor Carter probably died in this county. Dr. Cornelius A. Covert, the son of Samuel Covert, was born in Har- mony, Butler county, on June i, 1831, and died in Greensburg, Indiana, March 29, 191 o. At the solicitation of Dr. John W. Moody, he came to Decatur county during the Civil War, from VVilliamstown, on the Decatur- Rush county line, where he had been only a few years in practice. He read medicine in his native town of Harmony with Dr. Lusk, took a med- ical course at Cleveland, Ohio, and. in 1869, a post-graduate course in the Chicago Medical College. Doctor Covert was in continuous practice from the time he came to Decatur county, except a few instances when he returned to his old home in Pennsylvania, and when he was absent in Chicago in 1869. Doctor Covert was a safe and conservative physician, always atten- tive to the most minute detail, and never "gave a case up" as long as the patient breathed, and hardly then. He believed in "feeding," had confidence in remedies, was successful in his surgical cases, and had the confidence of his patrons to an unusual degree, because he had confidence in himself and the remedial means he used. If duty called him, he seemed indifl'erent to pain. In one of many instances he made daily visits to see cases under his care after he had been thrown out of his buggy and two ribs broken and other injuries received. He continued to do so after all eft'ort to prevail on him to desist had failed. Dr. Covert came to Williamstown prior to the fall of 1858, probably in 1857. None of his family resides in Decatur DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 35 1 county. One son, Samuel, li\'es in Dayton, Ohio, and another, named for his old friend. Dr. J. W. Moody, resides in Indianapolis. The late Dr. Francis M. Daily, of Milhousen, was born in Ireland on March i6, 1842, and came to America with his parents in 1847. He was the son of Dr. Michael Daily, who practiced in this county from the time of his arrival in America in 1847 until his death. Dr. Francis M. Daily was mar- ried on April 26, 1865, to Catherine Conwell, of Westport. He began the practice of medicine in 1868 at Milhousen, Dr. John Hicks being in practice there at that tirrie. Dr. Richard J. Depew was born in 1815. He practiced medicine in St. Omer, and later in St. Paul, Decatur count3^ for many years. He was a sturdy, robust man, physically able for the hardships of the pioneer phy- sician. For many vears his professional trips were made on horseback. He was a bachelor until late in life. He was a stanch Republican and was always ready to defend the principles of the party. Inditierent and neg- lectful in keeping his accounts, if he needed money, which was seldom, he would call on some of his patrons and "jump" accounts, indifferent as to whether his was too much or little. If too much, it was the fault of the patron, who "ought to have been sick more." It was his way of "scpiaring books." He moved to Indianapolis after marriage, and died there in 1879. He left a large bequest. Dr. Jesse M. Gillespie was, perhaps, the first physician to locate in Greensburg, as he was here prior to the year 1825. He built a brick resi- dence, the second one in the town, in 1826, on the south side of the square. He died in 1833, and his widow married Mr. Thomson. Dr. John Y. Hitt was born in Oldham county, Kentucky, on February 9, 1832. He studied medicine and graduated at the University of Kentucky in 1853. He came to Decatur county in 1854, to follow his profession. He was married to Martha Logan, daughter of Samuel Logan, Sr., in 1853. Two sons were born to this union. Dr. Sherman B. and Joel, both deceased. When the Seventeenth Regiment, Indiana Volunteers, was organized. Dr. J. Y. Hitt was appointed surgeon and ser\ed with \Vilder's lirigade. When the first board of examining surgeons for pensions was organized for Decatur county, Doctor Hitt was appointed as secretary by Commissioner of Pensions John C. Black, on February ir, 1886, 'serving in that capacity up to May 8, 1889. Doctor Hitt continued in practice in Greensburg up to a few years before his death. He was surgeon for the Big Four Railroad Company for a number of years, and the Grand Army of the Republic, department of Indiana, for two years. Doctor Hitt, with short intervals of absence, prac- 352 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. ticed medicine in Decatur cnunty about fifty-five years. He died in Greens- Ixirg and was buried in Soutb Park cemeten-. Mrs. Alartha Hitt also is dead. Dr. Sberman B. Hitt was Ijorn in Sullivan. Illinois, January lo, 1854, and died in Greensburg. He was the son of Dr. John V. and Martha (Logan ) Hitt. Except a very few years, he always resided in Greensburg. He graduated in the Greensburg public schools, later attended Notre Dame Institution two years. He attended the Jefferson Medical College at Phila- delphia, and graduated in the Ohio [Medical College in 1886. Doctor Hitt was a member of the city council for about twenty years. He was also sec- retary of the Greensburg board of health for several years. He belonged to the Greensburg Lodge, Independent Order of Odd Fellows. Dr. Sher- man Hitt married Mrs. ]^Iary Cline, of Greensburg, May 9, 1893. and one daughter was born to them. Dr. Sherman B. Hitt, who spent more than fifty years of his life in Greensburg, was known by almost everybody. He was neat in his dress, always tidy and was large, portly and stylish. As a citizen, he was popular, as shown by his frequent election to city offices. As a physician, he was up to the times in his profession. His death, on Se])tember 25, 191 1, was sud- den and a great shock to those who knew him and greatly regretted by his friends and patrons. A daughter, Gladys M., was married to Louis S. Linville on May 13, 19 15. Dr. Silas Cooke was born in ^lont\ille. New Jersey, in 1S09. He grad- uated from the College of Physicians and Surgeons in New York City in 1832. He was married the same year to Hannah Maria Mills, of Morris- town, New Jersey, and commenced the practice of medicine in Boonton, in the same state. In 1844, he removed to Rah way. New Jersey, and in 1866 to Greensburg, Indiana, where he died in 1882. Doctor- Cooke was a cour- teous gentleman ; in his practice he was ethical, conforming to the rules and usages of the profession, and was highly respected by his associates in the profession for his cjualifications and polished manners. The doctor's family consisted of wife, two daughters and one son. All are deceased e.xcept Mrs. Marshall Grover, of Greensburg. Dr. J. Mills Cooke was born in Boonton, New Jersey, in 1835, graduated from Princeton College in 1855, and later from the College of Phvsicians and Surgeons of New York City. He began the practice of medicine in Toledo, Ohio. He was surgeon in the Twenty-fourth Ohio Regiment from 1862, and was taken prisoner at Chickamauga with all the medical corps and sent to Libby prison. Upon his release he rejoined his regiment and was DECATUR COUNTY;, INDIANA. 353 with Sherman on his march to the sea. At the close of the war he returned to Toledo and in 1876 he came to Adams, Decatur county, where he died in 1884. He was a son of Dr. Silas Cooke and brother of Mrs. Marshall Grover, of Greensburg. Dr. Thomas Johnson was born in Oswego county, New York, on January 14, 1827, and came west with his parents in 1838. He was a sopho- more when he quit the now DePauw University to begin the study of medi- cine, which he did under Dr. L P. Kilcher, of Laurel. He graduated at the Cincinnati Medical College in 1865. He had, hnwever, practiced before tliis and had located at Clarksburg, where he remained until 1882. At this time he removed to Greensburg and ])racticed his profession successfully. After the election of President Harrison, he was, in May, 1889, appointed by Commissioner of Pensions James Tanner on the board of pension examin- ing surgeons for Decatur county, on which he served four and a half years. He was a Mason, having belonged to Decatur Lodge No. 36 and Chapter No. 8. He was a member of the Methodist church in Greensburg. He was married on January i, 1854, in Fayette county, and two married daughters survive. The mother died in October, 1870. On May 28, 1871, he married Sarah F. Gest, who survives her husband, wdio died in Clarksburg. Dr. Elliott W. Leech came to Milford from Cincinnati, Ohio, aljout the year 1856, and entered in partnership with Dr. James O'Byrne, which asso- ciation continued until he removed to St. Paul in 1862. From there he was commissioned assistant surgeon in the One Hundred and Twenty-third Regi- ment, Indiana Vnhmteer Infantry. Resigning his commission, he returned to St. Paul, and later, in 1865, returned to ]\Iilford to resume the practice at that place. In 1876, he removed to Shelby ville and followed his pro- fession. While at that place he was appointed a member of the board of examining surgeons for pensions, which he filled with credit until the reor- ganization of the board. Doctor Leech was a very successful physician, made many friends and had the utmost confidence of his patrons. He died in Shelbyville, lea\ing a wife, one daughter and two sons. Dr. Lewis AIcAllister and brother, Lucius, also a physician, came from New Jersey and located at Milford as early as 1840. The latter moved to Crawford county, Illinois, married a widow, Mrs. Alfred Lagow, and died there. Dr. Lewis McAllister, when he came to Milford, was apparently but a boy. He remained there until the spring of 1865, when he removed to Windfall, Howard county, Indiana, where he engaged in practice of medi- cine up to his death, in 1890, being- in active practice more than fiftv years. (23) 354 DECATUR COUNTY. INDIANA. Doctor McAllister believed in calomel, antimony and bleeding, a heroic practitioner, even in his day. He was a man of strong convictions and a Republican in politics. Dr. John L. Wooden was a student of Dr. McAllister. The latter was a member of the Decatur County Medical Society, attending the meeting of January 25, 1S47. the first in the county of which any record is found. He married Rachel Fugit about 1850. There were no children. She was an active and working memi)er of the Methodist church. Dr. Samuel ISIaguire was ijurn in Washington county, Pennsyh ania. November 25, 1818. His father, James ]\Iaguire, moved with his family, consisting of the wife and eight children, to Mason county, Kentucky, in 1 83 1. He was tlie contractor who built the old Maysville and Lexington turnpike, which is said to he the best in the world. In 1832 they moved to Fleming, an adjoining county, and lived near the one-time popular old Blue Lick Springs. Doctor Maguire's education was obtained at the famous Maysville Academy, conducted by Rand and Richardson. This academy claimed the distinction of having for its pupils Gen. \\'illiam H. Nelson, Gen. U. S. Grant. Hun. H. Watterson and many others of historic fame. .Samuel ]\Iaguire graduated in medicine at Transylvania University and began the ])ractice in Fdemingslnirg, Kentucky, in 1840. In 1842 he married Eliza R. Fleming, the granddaughter of John D. Fleming, after whom the county and town were named. To this union three sons and one daughter were born, John J., W^illiam V.. Samuel and Ida Louise. The daughter sun-ives and is now the wife of Judge James K. Ewing, of Greensburg. In 1854. F)octor Maguire mo\-ed to ^lissouri, where he remained six years, and while there he served two terms in the Missouri Senate. In i860, he returned to Flemingsburg, just when the South was on the brink of war. He at once took a bold stand for the National Lhiion. Being gifted as a public speaker, he endea\'ored to persuade the peo])le to stand liy the flag. His position was one of great personal danger. He was denounced, threat- ened and persecuted, but his fealty to the government was ne\-er lessened, and he remained steadfast in his loyalty to what he believed a just cause. He enlisted in the Tenth Kentuck}- Cavalry, and was commissioned assistant surgeon. Afterwards he served as surgeon in the Forty-fifth Kentucky Mounted Infantry with the rank of major. The war over, he returned to his old Kentucky home, to find that many who had once delighted to call him their friend and familv jjln'sician were now bitter enemies. His wife died soon afterward and he decided to turn his back on the scenes that had once been dear to him and seek a new home in Greensburg, Indiana, taking with him his youngest son, Samuel, and his daughter, Ida Louise. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 355 In 1872 he married Mrs. Bella Willett, of Louisville, Kentucky. To this union two sons were born, Herbert Cortez and Neil Gillespie. In 1891, he moved, with his wife and two young-er sons, to Louisville, Kentucky, where he died from paralysis on August 10, 1892. He was laid to rest in beautiful Crown Hill cemetery. During Dr. Maguire's long residence in Greensburg he made many warm friends. He stood high in his chosen profession ; was a high Mason ; a leading elder in the Christian church and a prominent Grand Army man. His activities were ceaseless, but in whatever circle one found him, he was always the same courteous, fair-minded Christian gentleman, with a sterling integrity and advocacy for the right. Dr. John W. Moody, a pioneer physician, became a resident of Greens- burg in 1839. He was liorn in Shippensburg, Pennsylvania, on June 12, 1816. He was one of the four delegates to the convention from Decatur county who were present at the formation of the present State Medical Society (now association), June 6, 1849, at Indianapolis. Among- some papers found in 1865, left by Dr. Lewis McAllister, for- merly of Milford, Indiana, Avas an article by Dr. J. W. Moody, read before the state medical society on "Epidemic Dysentery." There was no date to the paper, but it must have been written as early as 185 1 or 1852, as a very fatal epidemic prevailed in this county about that .time, and the doctor was in the midst of it. He was a regular attendant at the meetings of the State Medical Societ}- up to his death, and discussed, with great ability, any and all subjects coming before the society. As a practitioner he was careful, skillful, discreet and successful. For a number of years he was a member of the board of trustees of the state hospital for the insane. Among the doc- tor's duties, he was often called on to examine applicants for certificates to teach in the public schools. An applicant got a certificate that read: "This woman can read a little and write a little." It is not known if she taught. Doctor Moody was a Republican. A safe and discreet adviser, he was often consulted by Governor Morton and others in his position in his party. Doctor Moody was married to Martha Howland, daughter of Dr. John M. Howland, who died in Brookville, Indiana, January 11, 1858. There were two sons. After the doctor's death, on August 27, 1867, Mrs. Moody and one son removed to New York city. She was an authoress of note, an entertaining conversationalist and a dignified and beautiful woman. Dr. Theophilus E. F. Miller was born in Buffalo, New York, February 4, 1852, and died in Westport on May 26. 1908. He came to Milford, Deca- tur county, Indiana, early in 1884, direct from the Hahnemann Medical Col- 356 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. lege, of Chicago, Illinois. His predecessor, an eclectic and homeopathic. Dr. James O'Bvrne, after more than twenty-two years' practice, had made an opening for a physician of the school, from which Doctor Miller had recently graduated. Doctor ]\Iiller was of German parentage (Lutherans) and came to Chicago with his parents about 1855. He attended the schools of that cit\- and li\-ed there up to his coming to ]\Iilford, where he remained in the practice of medicine for about two years. Doctor ^liller was a firm beliexer in the siiiiilia siiiiilibiis curantiir theory of his brother physicians of that order and practiced it without deviation or concession. While in Mil ford, he made many friends and patrons, was a bachelor, wore a Prince AlJjert ciiat, neat and always well dressed, gentlemanly and respected by everyone who knew him. In 18S6 he moved to W'estport, in this county, where he had a lucrati\e practice up to his death, which was regretted by his many friends and patrons. Doctor Miller was married to Mrs. Nannie Cann in January, 1895. She died on June 10, 191 5. Dr. George W. Xew was a graduate of the Ohio Medical College, at Cincinnati, in the class of 1839-40. He located in Greensbm"g and was engaged in [tractice until 1859. He was a member of the Decatur County Medical Society on January 25, 1847, and was a delegate from Decatur county to the convention at Indianapolis, June 12, 1849, that formed the present state medical association. In 1859 he removed to Indianapolis to enlarge his field for surgical work, as he was specially qualified as a surgeon. This was recognized by Governor Morton, who commissioned him surgeon of the Seventh Indiana Regiment of Volunteer Infantry in 1861. he serving three years. In 1864 Governor Morton, having confidence in his integrity and qualifications, sent him to New Orleans as military agent for Indiana. After the war he was for two years examiner of drugs in the New Orleans custom house, showing his standing with the federal government. Doctor New was a man of fine presence and general accomplishments. He died in Indianapolis in 1891, aged seventy-two years. Mrs. New accom- panied her husband and rendered \ery efficient service as a nurse, endear- ing herself by her kindness and interest in many ways. She was a daughter of Dr. Abram Carter, one of the early physicians of Greensburg. Dr. James O'Byrne, eclectic and homeopath, was born in Ireland in 1820. He came with his parents to America, locating near Brook\-ille, Frank- lin county, Indiana, in 1832. He married Ann D. Moore in the year 1840. He moved to Milford, Decatur county, in 185 1, where he practiced medicine up to 1873, when he and his family and the families of two of his sons removed to Carroll county, Missouri. He practiced medicine at that place DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 357 up to his death, in 1896. Doctor O'Bryne was a successful physician, made many friends, and had a large practice up to the time of his removal. Dr. Uriah G. Reeves was born in Warren, Truniljull county, Ohio, in 1820, and died in Milford in 1882. He was educated at Allegheny College, Meadville, Pennsylvania, after which he taught school at Shelbyville and Liberty, Indiana. He was married to Jane Craig on February 28, 1846. He read medicine with Dr. William Armington. He began practice at St. Omer, remaining there five years, and then followed his profession at Greensburg from i860 to 1863, when he removed to Milford, continuing in practice there up to his death, in 1882, from cerebro-spinal meningitis, which pre- vailed at that time. Doctor Reeves was a local preacher in the Methodist church and was always ready and willing to serve in that capacity. He was a member of the Decatur County Medical Society, a good debater and con- tributed several papers of merit on medical subjects. He was also an Odd Fellow, in which order he passed all the chairs and was elected a representa- tive to the grand lodge from Centenary Lodge No. 535. As a member of the investigating and other committees, he was fair, unbiased and just. His family consisted of a wife, four daughters and one son. The latter died in 1866, aged about eight years. Doctor Reeves was successful in his practice and was always willing to serve the needy, regardless of compensation. He could do more practice on a small quantity of medicine than almost any other doctor. His remains rest in Milford cemetery. Dr. William F. Reiley was born on April 21, 1828. He received a com- mon-school education and taught school several years. He read medicine with Dr. William Armington, beginning practice in 1854. On February 8, 1859, he was married to Sarah E. Hood, daughter of William Hood, a sol- dier of the War of 18 12 and an early settler in Decatur county. To this union two children were born, Anne H., who married Sanford Darrah, now living at San Diego, California, and one, the youngest, who died in infancy. Doctor Reiley had an extensive practice in all directions from Sardina before, during and after the Civil War. He was president of the first board of examining surgeons for pensions, under President Cleveland, with Dr. J. Y. Hitt and J. H. Alexander. In his association with men of the profession he was found always polite, patient, sympathetic and considerate in the interest of the soldier, never being able to do as much for them as he desired. He never desired office, as his time was engaged pro- fessionally, but he was prevailed upon and elected joint senator from Deca- tur, Jennings and Scott counties in the state senate for one or more terms. He was a Democrat and highly respected by all parties. He died at Sardina, 35^ DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. this county, November 21. 1895. The Hst of graehiates of the Medical College of Ohio shows that W. F. Reiley. of Indiana, graduated in 1858. Dr. A. S. Reniy was born near Brookville, Indiana, October 16, 1819. After passing his boyhood on a farm and receiving a common-school edu- cation, he entered the Ohio Medical College, at Cincinnati, from which he was a graduate. In 1844 he was united in marriage to Almirah Scoby, and moved to Zenas, Jennings county, where he engaged in the practice of medi- cine. To this union were born three sons and one daughter. In 1856 he bought a farm near Greensburg, Decatur county, and engaged in farming, together with the practice of medicine. His wife died in 1S62. and the fol- lowing year he was married to Annie Kluge. To this union two children were born, one son and one daughter, the daughter dying in infancy. Doc- tor Remy was a member of the Presbyterian church and a member of the Masonic fraternity. He died March 31, 1890. Dr. Alfred Scoby Remy was born on January 29, 1847, at Zenas, Jen- nings county, and died at Zenas on June 20, 1882, being buried at South Park cemetery, Greensburg. He graduated at the Ohio Medical College in 1869. He was married to Anna DeBolt on February 14, 1S69. There were four children born to this union : Harry ; Nellie, who died in Kansas in 1873; Mrs. Ella Carter, living, and Carl, wdio died in Greensburg in 1893. Doctor Remy practiced medicine in Jennings and Decatur counties. Dr. William H. Remy was born on October 30, 1850, at Zenas, Jen- nings county, Indiana. He was educated at Butlerville College, Butlerville, Indiana, after which he entered the Ohio Medical College at Cincinnati. He began the practice of medicine in 1875 at Millhousen, DecatiU' county. In 1878 he was married to Delia Carper. He continued in the practice of his chosen profession until 1886, when he moved to Kansas and engaged in farming. Dr. John Ritchie renio\ed from Greensburg to Milford, Decatur county, at an early day and was one of the first physicians to locate at that village in the forties. One of his daughters married a Methodist minister. Rev. Tandy Haven. Another daughter, Sallie, married Lieut. A. J. Hungate, and with her husliand moved to Topeka, Kansas, in 1866. Doctor Ritchie was most probably a member of the medical society organized on Januarv 25, 1847. Doctor Edmund Swem was born near Camden, New Jersey, on August 12, 1810, and died in Greensburg on March 4, 1898. He received his medi- cal education at Cincinnati and began the practice of medicine at Peru, Indiana, later practicing at Mooresville. He came to Greensburg about DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 359 1846. He married Martha Gibson, daughter of Israel Gibson, an early resi- dent of Greensburg and a soldier of the War of 1812. His remains rest in South Park cemetery. A plain marble slab marks the Gibson grave. He was a Mason, which was noted on the headstone. Doctor Swem and his wife celebrated their golden wedding anni\'ersary several years before his death, in 1898. Mrs. Swem survived her husband. Rev. Edmund Hez Swem, pastor of the Second Baptist church, Washington, D. C., and Mrs. Ale Howard, of Greensburg, are the only children surviving. Doctor Swem was president of the Decatur County Medical Society in 1869, and was re-elected in 187 1. He was a regular attendant at the meetings and filled other offices up to the time he was unable to attend owing to the infirmities of age. He was a delegate to the State Medical Association several times.' He was a member of the Presbyterian church and his pew was seldom vacant at its meetings. Doctor Swem was a conservative and cautious physician ; he advocated small doses ; he had faith in the recuperative powers of nature ; he was not very favorable to calomel, as he had seen the ill effects of its abuse. He was very neat in his dress, quiet in demeanor, always polite, unassuming and g-entlemanly. There was also a Doctor Teal, who lived in Greensburg and who died in 1833. Dr. J. L. Underwood came to Milford about 1856. He married a Miss Avery, who lived on a farm on Flat Rock, Shelby county. There were two daughters. He removed from Milford to St. Paul early in the Civil War period. He died from cancer of the stomach and was buried at Ogden ceme- tery, near Waldron. He was a popular and successful phvsician and had many friends at both Milford and St. Paul. Dr. Newbery Wheeldon practiced medicine in this county prior to i860, following what was then known as the Thomsonian system, and called "steam doctors" by some in derision. These doctors used lobelia to control fevers, colds and almost any disease "flesh is heir to." Their system was mostly by stimulation, profuse sweating and discarded all mineral prepara- tions as used by the allopaths in that day. The abuse of calomel by some of the ultra-allopaths, who believed that salivation (ptyalism) was the onlv sal- vation in certain conditions, made patrons for this class of doctors, and they made all the capital possible out of it. Doctor \Vheeldon was perhaps the last doctor to practice that system in the county, as the eclectics have superseded them here. Dr. M. H. Williams-Letts, eclectic, was a member of the board of examining surgeons for pensions with J. H. Alexander and W. H. Wooden, 360 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. organized on May 19, 1897, ^"'' served on the board until June 19, 1901, when he resigned and removed to IndianapoHs. He was a careful, conscien- tious examiner always ready for the duties of his office and pleasant and obliging in his relations with others. Dr. John L. Wooden was born in Shelby county, Kentucky, ^lay 17, 1826, and came with his parents to Decatur county, Indiana, in October, 1830. In 1848 he began the study of medicine in the office of Dr. Louis McAllester, at Miiford, Decatur comity. In 1853 he began the practice of medicine in Andersonville, hVanklin county, and contiiuied there up to 1859, when he entered the Medical College of Ohio, and on March i, i860, re- ceived his degree of Doctor of Medicine. His first military service was ■with the Seventh Indiana Volunteer Infantry. On the formation of the Si.xty-eighth Regiment of Indiana Volunteers, he was commissioned sur- geon of that regiment, on August 29, 1862, having rendered efficient service in this organization. With his regiment, he was taken prisoner of war at Mumfordville, Kentucky, in September, 1862. He was exchanged in Novem- ber, 1862, but was again taken prisoner while in cliarge of the division hos- pital during the battle of Chickamanga, September 20, 1863. He was sent to Libby prison and remained a prisoner until exchanged three months later. He acted as brigade surgeon in General Willich's command and was an active member of the medical staff up to the end of the Civil War. Doctor Wooden was the first pension examining surgeon for Decatur county, and remained in charge up to the appointment of the first board of examining surgeons for pensions, under the Cleveland administration. His services in that capac- ity were eminently satisfactory to the soldiers, and duly appreciated by the pension department. Doctor Wooden was a regular attendant at the County Medical Society and State Medical Association and was a willing and work- ing member in both. His reports of cases were always interesting, instruc- tive and inspiring. His diagnosis of cases seemed to be by intuitinn. so prompt and so generally correct were they. As a consultant he was help- ful and tactful, and gave confidence and hope to the patient. As a surgeon he was cautious and skillful. He paid special attentinn to the details, anti- septically, in preparation for operative surgery, and hence his general suc- cess. Doctor Wooden was of Methodist parentage and had been a mem- ber since early in life. P'or many years prior to his death he was a leading Mason and was master of Concordia Lodge of Greensburg at the time of his death, his service as master embracing the following periods: 1873-81, 1883-4, 1886. As a soldier, he seldom failed to meet with his comrades of Pap Thomas Post No. 5, Grand Army of the Republic, of which he had DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 361 been commander. He was also senior vice-commander of the Department of Indiana of the Grand Army of the Repubhc. Doctor Wooden's death occurred on Sunday, November 28, 1886, to the regret and surprise of his many friends. His indomitable energy and active Hfe was more than his enfeebled condition could bear. He left his wife, Mrs. Sarah Guest Wooden, and four children — Dr. W. H. Wooden, now deceased; Elmer E. Wooden, Mrs. Edgar Hamilton and Mrs. Ida Moss — to mourn his sudden death. Dr. William Herschel Wooden was born in the village of Milford, Decatur county, Indiana, August 12, 1857, and died in Cincinnati, Ohio, on April 23, 1903. In 1867, he came to Greensburg with his father's family, where he pursued his studies in the public schools up to his graduation in the high school in 1873. He then entered, for a classical course, the State University at Bloomington. In 1876 he began the study of medicine with his father, Dr. John L. Wooden, and graduated from the Medical College of Ohio in 1879, eminently well qualified for the practice of medicine and surgery. On his return to Greensburg- he entered his father's office as a partner in his extensive and lucrative practice. Prior to 1882 he was elected secretary of the Decatur County Medical Society, and was an efficient officer for several years. In keeping the records and abstracts of important cases reported by the members, he was accurate, bringing out the important point in each case, not infrequently taking part in the discussion to cover in his report real deficiencies in the discussion. He seldom failed to be at the meetings of the State Medical Society, in which he took great interest. Doc- tor Wooden continued in a successful practice in this city up to 1888, when he had a call from parties who knew his qualifications and appointed him civil engineer on the Maple Leaf railroad through Missouri and Kansas to Minneapolis, and later with the Chicago, ]\Iilwaukee & St. Paul railroad. After his return, in 1892, he was appointed secretary of the county board of health, continuing up to December, 1894, his professional business pre- cluding his continuance in that office any longer. In May, 1897, Doctor Wooden was appointed secretary of the board of examining surgeons for pensions in Greensburg, serving in that capacity up to November, 1899, when, because of the pressure of professional business, he resigned, to the regret of his associates on the board. Doctors Williams and Alexander, who always found him accurate, truthful and careful in his examinations and scrupulously neat and correct in his papers. Dr. Herschel Wooden was a Mason, and served as master of his lodge in 1892 to 1893 and 1894. He also belonged to the Knights of Pythias, the Sons of Veterans and the Benev- olent and Protective Order of Elks. He continued in the practice of medi- 362 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. cine and surgery up to his fatal sickness in 1903. His mother, brother and two sisters survive and reside in Greensburg. His remains rest in South Park cemetery, Greensburg, alongside his father. Dr. James Brown Bracken was a graduate of a Philadelphia college of medicine and practiced medicine for many years with his father, Dr. W'illiam Bracken, of Rush and Decatur counties, thimgh the latter part of his life was devoted to the care of his father after he had retired from active life, owing to ill health. Dr. James B. Bracken was a man well read in his profession and other fields of literature and had qualities that made him firm friends and admirers. His opinions were positive and expressed openly either to advance a cause or oppose one in which he was interested or advocated. He died in Greensburg, October 31, 1913. Dr. Jesse Wakefield Rucker, grandson of Dr. William Bracken and nephew of Dr. James B. Bracken, obtained his degree from the Medical Col- lege of Ohio (Cincinnati") in 1885 and practiced medicine in Cincinnati and in Shelbyville, Indiana, until 1902. when he moved to Greensburg, his native city. While he has not been actively engaged in the practice in Decatur county, he holds a physician's certificate or license and has been often con- sulted by brother physicians, being considered a fine diagnostician. At pres- ent he is editor of the Nezv Era, a straight Democratic newspaper. MISCELLANEOU.S PHYSICIANS. In addition to the ph_\'sicians above mentioned, the names of several others have been located, l)ut little is known of any of them. Austin Marlow, known as a "chronic doctor," practiced at Newburg, Adams and Greens- burg. Doctor Pettigrew practiced at Newburg and Forest Hill. Doctor Riker was also at Newburg for some years. Dr. John L. Brown was prac- ticing at St. Omer in 1876. Dr. George F. Chittenden was at iMilford in 1858, and later become surgeon of the Sixteenth Regiment of Indiana Volun- teer Infantry. Dr. J. K. Smalley, of Forest Hill, had a large practice in the seventies in that community. Dr. John W'heeldon, an eclectic, was prac- ticing in Greensburg in 1866. Two other eclectic physicians of Greensburg of half a century ago were Doctors Falcomberry and Reiley. One of the most prominent of the early Catholic physicians was Dr. Michael Daily, of Irish parentage, who lived on a farm south of Greensburg. Another Catho- lic physician of the county, who died some years ago, was Dr. Francis M. Daily, of Millhousen, who was well educated and built up a large practice DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 363 in A'lillliou.sen and the surroimdinsr country. One of the best known of the younger physicians of Greensburg, who was accidentally killed a few years ago, was Dr. James Bracken, a son of Dr. William Bracken. He graduated from Ohio Medical College and upon his death, on October 31, 1913, his body was cremated at his wish. There have undoubtedly been many other physi- cians in the county, but they ha\'e not come under the observation of the writer. No effort has been made to touch upon the careers of the living mem- bers of the profession. Their work speaks for them. THE FIRST DECATUR COUNTY MEDICAL SOCIETY. The first medical society of Decatur county was formed on January 25, 1847, ^^''th Drs. A. Carter, of Greensburg: John Ritchie, perhaps of Mil- ford: \Villiam Armington, of Greensburg: John L. Armington, of Greens- burg: George W. New, of Greensl)urg: Sam C. Bartholomew, of Greens- burg: Lewis McAllister, of Milfod, and William Ardery as charter mem- bers. A short biography of each of these men may be found among the list of doctors given elsewhere in this chapter. Two years later Joseph C. Ard- ery, of Milford: John L. Armington, John W. Moody and George W. New, both of Greensburg, were sent to Indianapolis, where thev helped to organize, on June 6. 1849, the State Medical Society. TRAINED NURSES. The Legislature of 1905 passed an act providing for the registration of trained nurses in the counties where they followed their profession. Since that time the official records of Decatur county show that seven nurses have been registered in the county, as follow: Mary Wood Weaver, 1906: Myr- tle O. Smiley, 1906: Mary Donnell Stewart Erdmann, 1906: Mrs. Hannah H. Evans Donnell, 1906: Josephine Wright, 1906; Roxie Parker, 1909. OPTICIANS. The registration of opticians in tlie \arious counties of the state has been a legal requirement since 1907. During the past eight years six opti- cians have registered in the county: Eustace Foley, 1907: John Edward Russell, 1907; Philip H. Spohn, 1907: Cassius C. McCoy, 1907; James M. Burk, 1908; Walter E. Woolley, 1908. 364 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. PENSION BOARD OF DECATUR COUNTY. The pension examiner consisled of one man at first, with an assistant, but the assistant received no remuneration for his services. Dr. John L. Wooden was appointed as first examiner lay Gen. John C. Black, and Doctor. Hershel Wooden served as his assistant. On February 11, 1886, the board of examiners was created. Drs. John H. Alexander, John Y. Hitt and WWl- iam F. Reiley served on this first board. I3octor rfitt was chosen as secretary. Certain days were set apart in which to make the examinations. The exam- iners received two dollars for each examination up to five, and after five only one dollar was received. On May 8, 1899, a new board was appointed as follows: Drs. Thomas; Johnson. John Schofield and Samuel McGuire. Doctor ]\IcGuire soon re-^ signed and 13octor Alexander was appointed to fill the \'acanc3'. In Novem-* ber, 1893, ^fter the Democrats had regained power, a new board was ap-' pointed and consisted of the following members : Drs. James M. Wood, R. M. Thomas, who was appointed secretary, and Benjamin F. White. This' board served until the election of ^\'illiam ]\IcKinley, when the following board took its ]3lace, on May 19, 1897: Dr. John Alexander, who wa* elected secretary, William H. Wooden and M. H. \\'illiams, who was elected treasurer. Doctor Wooden resigned on November 23, 1899. This vacancy was filled bv Dr. R. M. Thomas, who was elected president. In June, 1901, Doctor W'illiams resigned, and on July 3, of the same year. Dr. D. ^^'. Wea\'er was appointed to fill this vacancy until April 19, 1905, after which the following board was elected and served one year: Drs. T. B. Guliifer, William R. Thomas and William Hause. They were succeeded by Drs. Beal. of Clarksburg: Eden T. Reiley, of Greensburg, and ^^'illiam Hause, of West- port. CHAPTER XIV. NEWSPAPERS OF DECATUR COUNTY. Newspaper men have frequently tried to sum up. in a pitliv paragraph. the function of the newspaper and thousands of articles have been written on its influence on modern life. Perhaps no more apt summary of the place of the newspaper in our civilization of today has ever been written than that of Joseph H. F'inn, a newspaper man of Chicago, and deli\ered by him as part of an address before the Associated Advertising Clubs of the World in the spring of 191 5. His apostrophe follows: "'l .\M THE NEWSPAPER." "Born of the deep, daily need of a nation — I am the Voice of Now — the incarnate spirit of the Times — Monarch of Things that Are. 'Aly 'cold type' burns with the hreblood of human action. T am fed b}' arteries of wire that girdle the earth. I drink from the cup of every li\-- ing joy and sorrow. I know not day nor night nor season. I know not death, yet I am Ijorn again with every morn — with e\erv moon — with every twilight. I leap into fresh being with every new world's event. "Those who created me cease to be. . The brains and heart's blood that nourish me go the way of human dissolution. Yet I live on — and on. ■"I am majestic in my strength — sublime in my power — terrible in my potentialities — yet as democratic as the ragged b\Ieek; secre- (25) 386 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. tary, Airs. Robert Scott; treasurer. Mrs. Nathan Logan. A committee of tlie execnti\'e officers was appi)intel. W. Richardson, W. B. Risk. William Roberts, W. T. Smith, D. N. Smith, A. Shires, H. Skillman, J. L. Tucker. T. E. Weston, J. C. Thomas, C. Warriner. Samuel Anderson, H. Baley, Samuel Bishop. James Cones, J. R. Canfield, W. A. Doyer, James Day, William A. Fortner, Samuel Garrison, Lew"is Bennett, \\'. G. Hays, W. T. Bagley. Thomas E. Banes, John Coy, T. S. Da\is, D. H. Dodd, J. W. Foster. James Gainor, W. H. Goddard, Joseph Hill, Frank Hughes, John Jones, Abram Knapp. Marion Linville, Joseph McCartney, Thomas Miles. Mathew ^IcElvoy, John McConnell, Richard Phillips, Robert Patterson, W. Ryan, Indn Robbins, C. C. Snodgrass. G. \\'. Sheffield, B. Shires, J. Shaw, William Hutcherson, Daniel Hendrickson, ^V. Jackson, James Kirkpatrick, Carter Loyd, Burnard Mullen, George D. Miller, James Elroy, Thomas Mozingo, William Potter, James Phillips, George R. Rhiver, Jeremiah Robertson. Robert Smith, J. B. Sharp. D. M. Smith, John Springer, Orville Thomson, H. Weston. D. C. Walters, G. W. Walker, T. F. ^^'alters, a total of one hundred and twenty. As only eighty-four men, rank and file, were necessary to form a com- pany, only one hundred and sixty-eight could be mustered in. This left a surplus of sixty-four men, who had to return home. There were some, however, whose names were not in the printed list who were mustered in. How many is not known. So there were prol.iably. in round numbers, two InuKh'ed and fift_\- l)ecatur county men who \-olunteered at the first tap of the drum, or enough for three companies, which wnuld have been two hundred and fifty-two men. The two companies from here were organized as follows when sworn into the service at the old fair grounds at Indianapolis on April 2^ : Company B — Captain, James Morgan; first lieutenant, Ira G. Grover; Second lieutenant, Benjamin M. Ricketts. Company F — Captain. J. V. Bemusdaffer; first lieutenant, B. C. Shaw; second lieutenant, J. L. Tucker. These men remained in camp at Indianapolis from April 22 until April 29, when they marched down Illinois and Washington streets to the union depot and took the cars for West Virginia. There they remained for three months and participated in the three first battles of the war: Pliillipi, on June 3; Laurel Hill, on July 8, and Carrick's Ford, July 13. It is a matter of history that Company B led the advance at Phillipi and fired the first vollev in the first battle of the great Civil War. The onl &' iv DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 427 casualty was the wounding of Colonel Kelly, of the First Virginia Regi- ment. Two of the enemy were hurt, one man by the name of James E. Han- ger, had his left leg shot off by a cannon ball, and Dr. G. W. New, a former Greensburg doctor and surgeon of the Seventh Regiment, amputated the leg and the man recovered. James Gavin, wdio enlisted in Company B, became adjutant of the regi- ment when it was organized, and when it was reorganized three months later for the three-year service he became lieutenant-colonel, and on Novem- ber 3 was promoted to the colonelcy, which he held until Ajiril 21, 1863. In the battle of Laurel Hill, on July 8, John Smith, of Company C, which was raised in Shelby county, was killed. He was the first Union soldier killed in the war. Upon their return nearly all of the Decatur men re-entered the service, either in the three-year Seventh or some other regi- ment, and many of them became officers. The ladies of Greensburg sent the boys bountiful provisions for a fine cHnner at their camp in Indianapolis on April 25. Captain Morgan presided at a meeting following the dinner and Will Cumback acted as secretary. The Standard, in its issue of April 26, in speaking of the soldiers going to Indianapolis, goes on to say that, "The volunteers are mostly from this city and township and are the best men of the community. Their departure on Monday was witnessed by the largest crowd ever convened in Greens- burg. Almost every man, woman and child was affected to tears. Strong- men and affectionate women, loving husbands and fond wives wept bitterly, but firmly submitted to the bitter necessity of parting and to the call of their country. It is indeed a sad sight to witness the departure of a father, husband or son for the battlefield, when perha]K naught but suffering and death await them, and it is truly a sad reflection when looking upon their manly forms to know that some of them will never return alive. May the Lord ]:)less and protect them is the prayer of e\'eryone. "The \-olunteers reached Indianapolis at twelve o'clock, Monday, marched to the state house and from there to Camp Morton. They are comfortably quartered, have plenty to eat and of the veiy best articles, and when we saw them last they were exercising their jaws in 'double-quick time,' laughing, joking and yelping for the Union. May they ever feel and fare as well and return safely home to their friends." ARTILLERY AND RIFLE COMPANIES. In addition to the two companies above mentioned, Greensburg raised a company of artillerists and one of riflemen. Captain \\'ilder was head of 428 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. the artillery compan\-. The StaiuUinl. o\ April 26, says that "The hoard of commissioners has appropriated six hundred dollars to purchase a cannon for Wilder's artillery company. Good!" The artillery company was at once accepted by Governor Morton and was told to hold itself ready, "awaiting the orders of the government." The rifle company met on Tuesday night, April 23, and elected the following oflicers : Captain, Giles White ; first lieu- tenant, W. H. Reed ; second lieutenant, David Endailey. This was what was known as a "home guard" company. GREENSBURG BAND GOES TO FRONT. The Greensburg regimental band, one of the best bands in the state, offered its services, which were promptly accepted. The names of the mem- bers of this band who volunteered in the service of their country were as follows : W. H. Lybrand, Joseph Tarkington, F. M. Tackett, William Christ, W. M. Fletcher, A. C. Withrow, William Withrow, John Hoffman, A. A. Annington, A. B. Armington, Emanuel Zorger and Samuel Bigger. The band went to Indianapolis Saturday, April 20, and the two companies of volunteers followed on Monday, April 22. This band enlisted with the Seventh Regiment for the three-year service, but was at the front only about one year of their second enlistment. It was found that the band was not as essential to the success of arms as it had been supposed. The fife and drum took the place of the band in nearly all regiments before the end of the war. Most of the members of the Greensburg band returned home in 1862. THE SEVENTH REGIMENT (THREE-YEAR SERVICE). A complete history of the Seventh Indiana Regiment was written and published by one of its members from Decatur county, Orville Thomson. It is interesting to note that this veteran of the Civil War, as well as veteran of the newspaiier fraternity of Decatur county, set all nf the tvpe by hand for this volume of two hundred and forty-two pages. As has been stated, Decatur county had two companies in the three- months service. The regiment left Virginia on July 23, 1861, and reached Indianapolis three days later. Idiey were discharged on August 2 and at once returned to their homes in Decatur county, but practically all of them had agreed among themselves to re-enlist for the three-year service. To f|uote from Comrade Thomson's history, "The conception of the three-year Se\'enth occurred while the train bearing the three-months men DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 429 homeward lay switched off at a station on the Baltimore & Ohio railroad, at Cameron, some twenty miles southeast of Wheeling. It was there that we first learned of the Bull Run disaster of a day or so previous, and that President Lincoln had issued a proclamatinn calling for three hundred thou- sand volunteers to serve for three years. This intelligence had a most depressing effect upon the men, hut this feeling was but for a moment. When the train was again under way a bevy of officers was gathered in the head(|uarters car engaged in considering the situation. When each had had his say, the colonel wound up the conference with this suggestion: 'Com- rades, let us reorganize the regiment, retaining its present number. Seventh, under this three-year call and fight it out to the grand finale." " Thus came into existence the re-organized Seventh for the three-year service. This regiment had a glorious historv and, without disparaging any other regiment, it may be said that it stands pre-eminently in the first rank. Some regiments saw more service and met with heavier losses, but that was later in the war and did not attract the attention that the deeds of the Seventh did. Thirteen davs after the men from this regiment returned from Virginia, in August, iS'6i, word came from Indianapolis to Decatur countv that the Seventh Regiment was being reorganized. On Monday, September 2, the men began to arrive in camp at Indianapolis and eleven days later the regi- ment was mustered into the United States service by Major Wood of the regular army. The field staff' and non-commissioned staff' officers of the Seventh Regi- ment were as follows : Acting colonel, Ebenezer Dumont ; ])rom()ted brigadier-general United States Volunteers, September 2, and assigned to that duty on November 3, 1861. Lieutenant-culonel, James Ga\in; j^romoted to colonel, November 3, 1861 : resigned April 22. 1863; re-entered service as colonel of the One Hundred and Thirty-fourth Regiment. Major, John F. Cheek; promoted to lieutenant-colonel, November 3, 1861 ; resigned Alarch 15, 1863. Adjutant, John ]\1. Blair: promoted to captain and acting chief surgeon United States Volunteers, April 14. 1862. Quartermaster, Richard P. Johnson: mustered out August 2, 1862. Chief surgeon, George W^ New : mustered out with the regiment. Assistant surgeon, \\'illiam C.illespie: transferred to Eighty-third Regi- ment, August 14, 1862. 430 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Risden D. ]\Ioore ; no date. John L. Wooden : promoted surgeon of the Sixt}--eighth Regiment. James T. Duffield ; mustered out witli the regiment. Caniel P. Linegar, mustered out with the regiment. Chaplains, John Kiger, resigned IMarch 15, 1863: \\'iniam R. Jewell, mustered out with the regiment. Sergeant-major, Cyrus B. Goodwin; discharged to accept commission in Sixty-eighth Regiment. Quartermaster-sergeant, William A. Curran : discharged January 24, 1863, by special order. Commissary-sergeant, Joseph M. Wallace; mustered out in .\pril, 1862. Hospital steward, Frank C. Xew ; transferred to Twentieth Regiment. REGIMENTAL BAND. ( Under a general order of the war department, of about the last of April, 1S62, all the regimental bands were mustered out, the Seventh's being the thirtieth to be discharged). The principal musicians were as follows- George W. Rhiver, died at home, .Vpril 21, 1862; Joseph B. Pepper, Charles M. Green, Nelson C. Lawrence, Joseph A. Tarkington, Francis M. Tuckett, Aaron C. Withfowe, John Floffman, Alfred Beard, Charles H. Doan, James T. Howard, Joseph B. Isreal, James King, Henry C. Reece, John A. Howard, Nathon ^^'. Sargeant, Jo.seph D. Patton, William H. H. Withrowe, William H. Snook, John T. Wheatley, William H. R. Tarkington, Harrison F. Bush, W'illiam H. Criss (died at Cumberland, February 13, 1862), John H. How- ard (died at Elkwater, December 6, 1861), and John C. Slawson. L. D. Braden, in the Sfaiulard of September 17, 1909, printed a six-col- umn history of this regiment and it is deemed well to quote from this excel- lent article for the remainder of the discussion of this regimeiU. "The .Seventh had not long to wait until it was into war in earnest. After three months' skirmishing around Elkwater, the regiment was shifted to the upper Potomac and, after some more skirmishing around Cheat Mountain, thev finallv got into a severe l)attle at Kernstown on March 22, 1862, where thev lost nine men killed and tliirteen wounded, of whom six died. This was the beginning of a series of battles in wliicli the regiment fought like heroes and sustained heavy losses. "On June 8, they were in the thickest of the fight at Port Republic, where they lost fifteen killed, thirty-four wounded and eight prisoners. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 43' Speaking of this engagement, the "Indiana Roll of Honor" says: 'It was here that the Se\enth Indiana won immortal glory.' "Then followed Cedar Mountain, Manassas, South ^iuuntain, Antietam, Chancellorsville, Gettysiwrg, Cold Harbor, Wilderness, Petersburg and, ending with the battle at W'eldon Railroad on August 23, 1864, the Seventh gave a good account of itself and reflected glory upon the great state of Indiana. About September 15, 1864, the regiment left Old \'irginia for home and, on September 2(), the\' were mustered out. "General Hoffman, of Pennsylvania, who had command of the brigade of which the Seventh was part, gives the Seventh Indiana credit for saving the Union ami}- from defeat at Gettyslnirg. On the night after the first day's battle, July i, 1863, Colonel Gro\er obser\ed there were no troops on our right on Gulp's Hill. Taking a squad of men, he proceeded to investi- gate the gap and, while there, ran up against a rebel scouting party with the same intent. Colonel Grover ordered them to 'Halt! Surrender!' and the enenn-, thinking it was the main body of the Unionists, surrendered. In the ]>arty brought in were a captain and a lieutenant of the Forty-second Vir- ginia. Colonel Grover was breveted a brigadier for his clever play. He had found the gap and his prompt action kept the rebels from jire-empting it and flanking the Union right wing, which would have meant defeat of the entire army. "In all, the regiment participated in twenty-se\'en battles and lost two hundred and thirty-five men. .\bout one hundred and fifty of the men whose term of office had not expired in September, 1864, were transferred to the Nineteenth and Twentieth United States regiments and were present at Appomattox when Lee surrendered. So the men of the Seventh were in the fray from first to last." DECATUR COUNTY LOSSES. Following are losses sustained by the companies from this county : Killed in action during the war, 24; died of wounds, 5: died in ])ris()n, 17; died of disease, 33; total deaths, yq. Wounded in battle: Company D, 14; Companv E, 9; Company G, 11 : tntal, 34. Total deaths and wounded, 113. KILLED IN ACTION. Companx D — Lieutenant Roliert Braden, Henderson, Kentucky, July 26, 1862; Henry Bartee, Winchester, May' 12, 1863: Asa Chapman, Spottsyl- 432 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. vania, June g, 1864: James C. Kelly. Port Repiiljlic. June 9, 1862; Joab Shirk, Port Republic. June 9, i86j : \\'\\\ S. Owens, Petersburg, June 18, 1864; Oliver A. Owens, Spottsylvania, May 12, 1864; Samuel Thornburg, Wilderness, May 12, 1864. Comically E — Capt. George 1'. Clayton, Wilderness, May 7, 1864; Albert \\'. Vorris, Wilderness, May 5, 1864: George \\'. Michael, Port Repuljlic, June 9, 1862; John ]\I. Young, Port Republic, June 9, 1862; John Theod(M-e, Uniontown, No\ember, 1861; James W. Young, Laurel Hill, May 8, 1864. Company G — Sergeant David C. Gageby, North Anna River, May 27, 1864: Joseph Beetem, Petersburg, June 18, 1864: Benjamin Higdon, Yellow- House, May 3, 1864; James Higdun, Cliancellorsville, I\lav 3. 1863; Charles Jones, Wilderness, May 5. 1864; Thomas McLaughlin, Wilderness, May i^, 1864: Daniel J. McCoy, Wilderness. May 5, 1864; John Patterson, Manas- sas Plains, August 29, 1862: William T. Ryland. Gettysburg, July 3, 1863; McCowan H. Smith, Wilderness, Alay 5, 1864. DIED Oi'- WOUNDS. Company G — John McCain, Port Republic, June 9, 1864: John A. Small, Spottsylvania, May 14, 1864. Company E — George W. Meek, Petersburg, A.ugust i, 1864. Company G — John N. Hann, wnunded at South [Mountain, September, 1862; Sydney R. Griswdld. Winchester, May 5, 1863. DIED IN PRISON. Company D — Will Clendenning, Florence; Isaac Higgs, Wilmington; George W. Johnson, Wilmington ; George \\'. Shirk, Florence. Companv E — Daniel W. Anderson, Andersonville ; Uriah Bartclay, Andersonville ; John W. booster, .Vndersonville ; Peter L. Hamilton, Ander- sonville; John H. Horn, Andersonville; Amzi Demaree, Andersonville; Sam- uel Lexel, Andersonville; John Tremain, Salisbur}-. Companv G — Orion W. Donnell, Salisbury; Bazil G. Boyce, Salisbury; Newton J. Land, Salisbury; William Paul, Andersonville. Besides furnishing three companies for this regiment, Decatur county also furnished the regimental band of twenty men, which was with the regiment until April "30, 1862. Three of these died while in service: G. W. Hiver. bibn W. Howard and ^^'illiam H. Criss. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. OFFICERS IN COMMAND. 433 The Seventh was in the command of the following colonels : April 22 to July 22, i86i, Dumont; September 13 to November 3, 1861, Duniont : November 3, 1861, to April 22, 1863, Gavin; April 22, 1863, to September 20, 1864, Grover. The lieutenants were Ga\iu, Cheek and Banta. The majors were Cheek, Banta and Welsh. On Ala}- 4, i8r)4. Colonel Grover and forty- four of his men were cap- tured in the Wilderness, and he was away from the regiment for four months. During this time Lieutenant-Colonel Banta was ill antl the com- mand of the regiment fell upon Major M. C. Welsh, who kept up the reputa- tion of the leaders of. the regiment and was a favorite with the bovs. The next day after the capture of Colonel Grover — Mav 5 — the Sev- enth got into a hard tight with the I-'iftietli Virginia, and captured practically all the regiment, including the colonel and the flag. It is claimed the capture of the flag was made by Perry S. Tremain, Robert L. Alyea and T. M. RIozingo, of Company E. although the records credit it to J. N. Opel, of Companv G. All were Decatur count}- men. THIRTY-SEVENTH REGIMENT. The Thirty-seventh Regiment of Indiana Volunteers went into camp at Lawrenceburg in August, 1861, and, after drilling about a month, was mustered into the service on September iS. Decatur county had two com- plete companies, E and H, in this regiment, and also a number of men in Companv K. The commissioned officers of Company E were as follow : Captains, Mahlon C. Connett, Frank Hughes and William B. Harvey; first lieuten- ants, Frank Hughes, William B. Harvey and George W. Hungate ; second lieutenants, Andrew J. Hungate, William B. Harvey and George W. Hun- gate. The non-commissioned officers of this company were : First sergeant, William B. Harvey ; sergeants, Lafayette Ford, Thomas B. Peerv, \\'illa Raynes and George W. Hungate; corporals, William A. Whitlow, Philip S. Guthrie, Daniel J. Ballard, Abraham B. Cook, Charles W. Sherman, Martin F. Sidener, James K. Gully and Wesley N. Barnes; musicians, Nicholas A. Butler and William Stopper; wagoner, Benjamin F. Price. The privates were James G. Adkins, Wesley H. Adkins. Columbus Ballard, Toshua Barton, Frederick Beck, Hiram Bowling, Martin Brooks, (28) 434 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Lewis C. Brooks, George W. Buffington, Matthew Buell, Thomas H. Carter, William E. Clark, Albert B. Connet, Andrew J. Cook, Edward Coleman, Reuben H. Conner, James R. Conner. James Cox, \\'illiam J. Crisler, Howard Creed, Samuel Davidson, William Dean, Andrew Ensinger, George H. Eubanks, Robert Favour, George W. Fleming, Joseph Ford, Benjamin Ford, Oscar J\I. Garrett, John T. Glass, George W. Gullion, James A. Hanger, Robert F. Heaton, Henry Hogan, Charles Hogan, Gideon Hornice, Addison Hughes, Charles T. Hunt, James T. Johnson, James Jordon, Abram Knapp, Thaddeus Knight, Stephen Lewis, James C. Lewis, Milton Martin, \\'illard R. Marsh, Jacob Maharry, Joseph A. Marks, William McKeeon, James C. McKee, Bert McNeely, John T. Morgan, Jacob ^V. Neeb, John Parson, Dudley Price, William Richy, Enoch Rickets, Arthur O. Scull, Alfred C. Scull, Philip Slifer, John Slifer, Reuben Smawley. Lewis Smawley, John H. Smith, Benjamin R. Smith, John B. Stogsdell, Bethuel G. Stark, Solomon Swango, Thomas S. Tevis, James Tillison, Will- iam H. Thompson, James Tracewell, Lafayette Walker, Samuel Wells, Buckner C. Whitlow, Milton ^L Wilson, James Kimber, Wesley Wilder, James H. Wooley, Albert Woofers, John F. Wolverton and Thomas J. Wood. Recruits. Thomas J. Stevens, Samuel Scott and Charles W. Woodard. The commissioned officers of Comijany H. are here given: Captains, William H. Tyner, Ouartus C. Moore, George W. Pye, James H. Burke and John L. Hice ; first lieutenants. Ouartus C. Moore, George C. Pye, James H. Burke, John L. Hice and Augustus H. Tevis ; second lieutenants, George W. Pye, James H. Burke, John L. Hice and Augustus H. Tevis. The non-commissioned officers were: First sergeant, James H. Burke; sergeants, John S. Douglas, Levi Smith, Benjamin D. Fowler and John L. Hice; corporals, Augustus H. Tevis, Joel M. Proctor. John N. Jones, John J. Paul, John M. Roop, David B. Sutton and Joseph W. Garrison; musicians, Isaac J. Tyner and James J. Cunningham; wagoner, ^lilton G. Moor. The [jrivates were Noah L. Brunton. \Villiam H. Burk, Newton Burk, William Baldwin, James Buck, Squire H. Cowen, Harrison Cowen. John Cowen, Benjamin F. Clark. Edward Davis, Samuel Dickson, James C. Day, David Douglas, Benjamin L. Demoss, Henry Day, Barton N. Dailey, George C. W. Diggs, Stephen Enos, Robert Ewbanks, William S. Ford, Thomas S. Ford, James P. Ferguson, Pliram Fredinburg, Alfred Fry, Samuel Harper, Lewis M. Hunter, John Hoter, Jacob A. Hutchinson. John Hunter, Daniel Harry, William Homsher, William Harrell, John S. Har- DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 435 rell, Jolin A. Johnston, William Laforge, Martin Moor, Francis F. Mc- Cracken, Samuel Miller. Richard Martin, William R. Murray, James Miller, Samuel M. McClure, James T. Mitchell, Anderson Owen, Warren Patrick, Elisha G. Patrick, James Patrick, James Pettit, James W. Peak, Absalom Robbins, Harrison Robbins, Anderson Rutherford, David Stone- cypher, Nathaniel Shattuck, Theodore L. Stout, James R. Scott, William G. Shafer, Thomas W. Shera. Benjamin Starrett, Thomas A. Shirk, Zemry Shaw, Henry J. Steward, Martin J. Snook, William A. Thompson, Andrew Waggoner, Samuel Williams, Alfred Watson, John D. Woodall, John C. Wimmer, Robert Whittaker, Isaac Yauger. Recruits, Benjamin T. Den- ham, James B. Denham and James \Vard. On the evening of Saturday, October 19, 1861, the regiment marched through Lawrenceljurg and took boats down the ri\-er to Louisville, where they arrived the next morning. After spending a few weeks there in a drill, it moved on to Elizabethtown, Kentucky, and from thence to Bacon Greek, Kentucky, where they spent the months of December and January. Early in February it moved against Bowling Green, Kentucky, and on the Confed- erates' retreat from that town, proceeded to Nashxille, Tennessee, and went into camp. From there they proceeded by easy marches to Huntsville, Alabama. From there they went to the rescue of the Eighteenth Ohio at Athens, Alabama, and then returned again to Fayettesville and from there proceeded to Chattanooga, Tennessee. The Thirty-seventh first saw heavy fighting in the battle of Stone's Ri\er on December 31, 1862, where its losses were severe. It was then detailed to guard Murfreesboro and from there started on the Tullahoma campaign. Aliout the last of August, 1863, a for- ward movement was ordered and the Thirty-Se\'enth took part in the Chick- amauga campaign, with its great battle at Chickamauga. No campaign or battle of the Civil War did greater honor to the fighting cpiality of the Northern soldier, or accomplished more for the crushing of the rebellion than the battle of Chickamauga. When they arrived at Chickamauga on the morning of the 22nd of September, the}' went into camp and ])repared for the siege of that place. During this siege they nearly starved, li\'ing on corn, cowtails and acorns. But Chattanooga fell and early in May, 1864, the Atlanta campaign was ushered in. In this the Thirty-seventh did its part in helping to push the Confederate forces back to Buzzard Roost, to Rocky Face and on to Resaca. From there it moved forward to Calhoun, was present at the battle of Pumpkinvine Creek and helped Sherman take Atlanta. As the regiment had been mustered into the service on the i8th day of September, 1861, it was ordered on that day in 1864 to report at Indianapolis 436 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. as early as possible. On the Kjtli it reported from Atlanta on a train com- posed mostly of stock and platform cars. They arrived in Indianapolis on the 2jnd, and on October _'7th were paiil off and mustered out of service. SI.XTY-EIGHTIl REGIMENT. The Sixty-eighth Regiment was recruited in the fourth congressional district under Benjamin C. Shaw. It was organized at Greensburg by Shaw, who later liecame lieutenant-colonel nf tlie regiment. It was mustered into the service on August 19, 1862, at Indianapolis, with E. A. King as colonel. It was taken to Louisville and shortly afterwards was captured at the battle of Mumfordville, Kentuck}-. It was paroled and sent to Indianapolis to await exchange. On Decemljer 26, iS(')2. part of the regiment went to Louisville, where it was joined on the last day of the year by the remainder of the regiment. It was then taken to Alurfreesboro, Tennessee, and until after the fall of Kno.x\'ilIe it was fighting in that state. It was in the three big battles of Hoover's Gap, Chickamauga and Missionary Ridge. At the Iiattle of Chickamauga the regiment lost one hundred and thirty-five, killed, wounded and missing, out of a total of three liundred and fifty-six men and officers. This frightful casualty list was due to the fact that it was one of the last to leave the field. On August 14, 1864, the regiment went to Dalton, Georgia, and for the next three months was fighting in Georgia, Alabama and Tennessee, returning to the latter state in time to take part in the battle of Nashville, on December 15. 1864. It stayed at Nashville until the second week in January and was then taken ti5 Chattanooga, where it did guard duty from January to June. It was mustered out of the service at Nash- ville, June 20, 1865. SEVENTY-SIXTH REGIMENT. Decatur county had more men in the Seventy-sixth Regiment of Indiana Volunteer Infantry than in any other regiment, having furnished five full companies, as well as several commissioned officers in addition. This regi- ment was probably organized on shorter notice than any other, with the exception of those which went to the front in the spring of 1861. 1die Reliels were threatening to cross the Ohio river into Kentucky during the summer of 1862 and when a band of thirt_\- actually crossed the river into Warrick county, the \\liole state of Indiana was aroused as it has never been lie fore or since. They plundered Newburg, in Warrick county, and the frightened inhabitants of the southern part of the state were in a state DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 437 of terror, not knowing, of course, Init that a larger force was making ready to make a descent on the state. It was this incident wliich led to the organization of the Seventy-sixth Regiment. Colonel Ga\in. of Greensburg, who was home on a furlough at the time, telegraphed Governor Morton on Frida}-, July 18, 1862, tendering his services and three hundred men to drive these "bushwhackers'' out of that region. A fa\-orable reply was received at eleven-thirty that night and the city was aroused and enlistments began at once. By nine a. m. the next da}- two hundred and fifty men were ready, but lack of transportation made it necessary to wait until afternoon, when five hundred left for the capital, having been raised in eighteen hours. This shows the temper of the times. Decatur county had alread\- sent three companies in the Seventh, one in the Thirty-seventh, Rigby's battery, and others in other commands, amounting to probably five hundred men in the service when these "minute men" responded so nobly. When the}- reached Indianapolis, men from other parts of the state joined them and formed the Seventy-sixth Indiana Regiment. This was one of the most exciting times during the whole w-ar. At three P. M., Sunday they left Indianapolis for Evansville, where they arrived on Monday. They crossed the ri\er and marched eighteen miles to near Peters- burg, Kentucky, in the hottest of weather. Many of the raw troops were o\-ercome with heat. After scouring the country south of Henderson for three da}s. they were unable to find any considerable force — they having taken wings to other parts. On July 24 Lieut. Robert Braden was killed by bushwhackers while riding w^ith Colonel Gavin, Doctor Worz and Delos Thompson. Colonel Gavin was shot through the left hand. On August r the regiment was ordered from Henderson to Morganfield, where a force of .eight hundred was reported, but when they got there the enemv had fiown. The officers of the Seventy-sixth Regiment were as follows : Colonel, James Gavin; lieutenant-colonel, John T. Wilder; major, D. W. Elliott; adjutant, Irvin Robbins; surgeon, J. T. Duffield; cjuartermaster, S. A. Bonner. The five companies from Decatur county ^vere officered as follows : Company B — Captain, Robert Higgins ; first lieutenant, W. L. Alvea ; second lieutenant, \\'. AI. Fletcher ; orderly, J. B. \\'right. Company C — Captain, Luther Donnell : first lieutenant, Hugh Weston; second lieutenant, B. H. Harney ; orderly, I. N. Shirk. Company D — Captain. Charles T. Bell ; first lieutenant, John H. Braden ; second lieutenant, John H. Kirby ; orderly, \\'illiam Caldwell. 438 DECATUK COUNTY, INDIANA. CoiiijHiiiy E — Captain. T. 11. lintlcr: first lieutenant, \\'illiani .Marsh; second lieutenant, William AlaiKllove; orderly, Robert Inilay. Comf'aiiy F — Captain, Benjamin Jenkins; first lieutenant, Peter Wal- ker; second lieutenant, William Smith; orderly, j. McLean. I hit little has been written aljnut the Seventy-si.xth Regiment. Some of the men \\ho saw lonj^er and more difficult service have spoken lightly of the "gallant Seventy-sixth." and yet it did a good job in clearing the Ken- luek\- woods ol the ])esti I'erous guerrillas, murderers and outlaws who preyed u])oii the people. Ihev captured a number of them and scared the others away. Many of the officers and men in the Seventy-sixth had seen service in other commands, and if it had been necessary the regiment could ha\e ])ut u]) a bard fight, e\en if the\- were hastily gathered together and the majoritv of them without training. History offers a word of praise for them. The body of Lieutenant Braden was brought back to his home near Milford by John H. Braden and Joseph 1). Pleak, and on Sunday, July 29, the funeral was held in the presence of one of the largest audiences ever seen ill that loralitw The burial was in charge of the Masons. ONE HUNDRED .'VND TWENTV-TIIIRD REGIMENT. The One lluiuhed and Twenty-thirtl Regiment was recruited from the fourth ami seventh congressional districts and rendezvoused at Greensburg during the winter of 1863-64. It was mustered into the service on March 9. 1864, with John C. McOuiston as colonel. On March 18 the regiment left for Nashxille, Tennessee, and shortly afterward was ordered to join Sherman in his attack on Atlanta, .\fter remaining with Sherman for most of the summer in (leorgia. the regiment returned to Tennessee in pursuit of Hood and i)articipated in the battle of Nashville, December 15-16, 1864. Within a few weeks it was taken to \\'ashington, D. C., en route to Fort Anderson, North Carolina, where it remained through bV'bruary and .March, iS()3. It w.is then taken to Newbern and later through the central ])art of the state until it joined Sherman at Goldsboro. It was eventually mustered out, .August 25, 1865, at Raleigh, North Carolina, autl left for Indianapolis on the same da\-, arrixing there September 4. ONE HUNDRED AND THIRTY-FOURTH REGIMENT. The One Hundred and Thirty-fourth Regiment was mustered in at Indianapolis, May 25, 1864, with James Gavin as colonel. It spent its short time at the front doing garrison and guard iluty in Tennessee. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 439 > ONE HUNDRED AND FOKTV-SIXTII REGIMENT. The One Hiiiulred and l-'orty-sixth Regiment was recruited in the first, third and fut no s])ecific acts of depredation can be charged to them. They had too little time to do any mischief. The Grccns- burg Standard, in its issue of July ig, 1863, has a graphic accmmt of the raid as it affected Decatur county, and the same is here gi\-en in full : "Sunday and Monday (July 12 and 13) last, our city appeared more like a military camp than anything else. Companies had gone from here upon the reception of the first news of the invasion below, but not until Saturday night did we suppose Morgan intended making so extensive a trip as he had projected. "At that time we learned of his moving farther north and east, threat- ening the counties south of here. The people were aroused, and preparations for defense commenced. Sunday seemed like no Sunday at all, but certainly 44" DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. like no other day we had ever seen. Arms of all sorts were gathered up and conii:)anies organized. "Men came in from the count}', singly and in squads, mostly mounted, but coming anyway to get here. About half past two Colonel Gavin's regi- ment of militia, including the companies from this county, arri\'ed from Indianapolis and were met at the depot by vast crowds of people and large (juaiuities of provisions. "They remained until nearly four o'clock, when they left for Lawrence- burg, or where\'er their services were needed. About two hours afterward. Colonel Shryock's regiment from Wayne and adjacent counties arrived. In this regiment Judge Gooding and a brother-in-law of General Burnside were "high privates." They expected for a time to remain here o\'er night, but about nine o'clock got news that hurried them on, it being reported that the advance regiment had been skirmishing- with the enemy about Sunman, twenty-three miles distant on the railroad. A battery also passed thrcjugh in the night. "In the meantime, people came into town from all directions, with all sorts of weapons. Scouts were sent out in every direction and pickets were stationed on all roads. News came in and rumors of all sorts were cir- culated. During all this time almost everybody appeared cool, though there were some exceptions. "Monday's operations were a repetition of those of the previous day, only on a larger scale. Men continued to come in and new companies were organized, though quite a number of men appeared to rely upon bushwhack- ing on their own account. "Business was totall\' suspended and the stores remained closed. Toward evening reliable news came that the rebels had crossed the railroad about twenty-five miles laelow and were pushing into Ohio. Many at once started for home, but a large number remained until night and some till morning. At this time the treasurer's office was stored full of provisions of all sorts, enough to feed ten regiiuents at least. Another alarm was given Monday night, but it was soon discredited, and by Tuesday business commenced again." The first company left Greensburg on Friday morning, ha\'ing been recruited in about ten hours' time. The officers were : Irvin Rolibins, cap- tain; James S. McPheeters, first lieutenant: G. M. Hamilton, second lieu- tenant; James Alexander, orderly sergeant, and O. B. Scobey, company clerk. The regiment organized here was known as the One Hundred and DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 44I Fourth Indiana. There were six such regiments in the state, beginning with the One Hundred and Second. They were known as "minute men" and were to serve ten days. The One Hundred and Fourth was organized July 10, and after Iieing- taken to Sunman the following day, and from there, in Lawrenceburg, it marched toward Harrison, but gave up the chase and returned home July i8th and was mustered out. Six of the companies were from Decatur count)-. The officers were as follows: Colonel, James Gavin; lieutenant-colonel, James S. Buchanan; major, M. \V. Richardson; adjutant, A. G. Armington; quartermaster, W. S. Woodfill ; surgeon, Dr. L. C. Thomas ; assistants, Dr. James McLain and Dr. John Wheeldon; sergeant-major, James S. Halsey; quartennaster-ser- geant, John M. Tucker; commissary sergeant, Rufus Hinkley. Company A — Rush county, captain, Franklin F. Swain, Milroy. Company B — Captain, Charles T. Bell, St. Omer; first lieutenant, Isaac Seright ; second lieutenant, James A. Rankin. Company C — Captain, Luther Donnell, Kingston; first lieutenant, G. B. Roszell ; second lieutenant, A. F. McCoy. Company D — Captain, Hugh Weston, Newpoint; first lieutenant, Adam Sample ; second heutenant, O. T. Briggs. Company E — Captain, W. T. Marsh, Milford; first lieutenant, A. J. Hungate ; second lieutenant, R. C. Benson. Company F — Captain, W. A. Donnell, Clarksburg; first lieutenant, James F. Smith ; second lieutenant, Edward Speer. Company G — Madison county. Company H — Captain, Irvin Robbins ; first lieutenant, James S. Mc- Pheeters ; second lieutenant, G. M. Hamilton. Company I — Marion county. Company K — Fa}'ette county, captain, J. P. Orr, Benton\ille. A WAR-TIME CONVENTION. Proi:)al)ly the biggest political gathering held at Greensburg during the war was a union county convention held February 2\. 1S63. Samuel Bryan presided and J. J. Hazelrigg acted as secretary. Speakers were United States Senator Joseph H. Wright, Senator Brown, of Delaware county, and Dr. Ryland T. Brown, of Indianapolis. Resolutions adopted called for vigorous prosecution of the war and denounced all schemes for a compromise as treasonable. Senator Wright declared that leff^ Davis could not justifv his cause as a 442 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. revolt against tyranny, as n(.)t one single right belonging to any state had been taken away from it. l-'nr this reason, he said there were no gronnds for secession and rebellion and no wrongs to redress. "This war was brought on by designing men thirsting for power,"' he said. "If the right of secession is established, our government is gone and we w ill have nothing left but anarchy and ruin." .Vt the conclusion of the meeting the following county central commit- tee was appointed: Washington township, B. H. Harney, J- V. Woodfill and Charles Hazelrigg; Fugit township, L. A. Donnell ; Clinton township, Charles Kemble ; Adams township, Charles Woodward ; Clay township, W. S. Tillson ; Jackson township, Columbus Trimble ; Sand Creek township, \\'illiam McCullough: Marion township, G. \Y. Patrick, and Salt Creek township, James j\Iorgan. .\ CI\'II.-W.\R RIOT IN GREENSBURG. In the latter part of i8'6j and the early part of 1863 there began to be organized in Decatur county, as well as in other counties in the state, groups of men who were opposed to the further prosecution of the war. So pro- nounced and rebellious were their views of the way the war was being conducted that they often came into conflict with the military author- ities. The first general organization of these men was known as the Knights of the Golden Circle: later they were known as the American Knights : still later they denominated themselves the Sons of Lib- ertv. While many good men were led to join them, it is doubtful whether more than a mere handful, comparatively speaking, ever knew the extent of their secret designs. The leaders of the Knights of the Golden Circle in 1863 claimed to have forty thousand members in Indiana, and before the end of the war this number must have reached nearly seventy-five thousand. Locally, they were known as "Butternuts" and "Copperheads" and the loyal Union men hated them worse than they did the Rebels. In the spring of 1863 the memliers began wearing butternut emblems openly and defying public sentiment in such a way as to invite trouble. If the}- were looking- for trouble they had no difficulty in finding it and numerous personal encounters were staged between the wearers of the hated emblem and the loyal Union men. Greensburg witnessed a riot on Saturday, April 25, 1863, on which day there was a great political rally in the county seat. Hundreds of peo- ple were in town on that eventful day and very many of them had DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 443 on butternut emblems. It could hartlly liave been expected that the day would pass \\ithout some violence and it seems that the "Butternuts" were courting troulile. And they found it. Before the day was over numerous shots were fired, fist fights were engaged in on every corner and more e.xcite- ment prevailed around the public s(|uare than Greensburg has ever seen before or since. The Greensburg Standard tells the story in its issue of the week following and as it was an eyewitness of the fracas, its account is given verbatim, as illustrati\'e at least of the style of discussion then indulged in by the newspapers, as follows : "The day had been extensively advertised amon.g those who opposed the war, and great speakers were here to criticise the government and influence the already e.xcited minds of the 'Butternuts' and 'Copperheads,' as they were called. United States Senator Thomas Hendricks. Judge Joseph E. Mc- Donald, Attorney-General Oscar B. Hord and Judge R. D. Logan, men of commanding ability, were here and spoke in the court house to an immense audience of men, many of whom came from distant parts of the county and adjoining counties armed and looking for trouble. They had boasted that they would 'take the town.' One delegation of eighty horsemen from Sand- creek, Jackson and Clay townships met at the Goddarcl school house and drilled for an hour before marching into town. Many of them were armed and wore butternut emblems. They rode into town and around the square just before noon. This was the only demonstration of the forenoon. "The first outbreak was about noon, when a man l)y the name of Finlev, wearing a butternut pin, challenged a Union man to take it ofi^, feeling that he had such strong backing that no one would dare attempt it. \\'hen the dust had cleared away Finley and 'his brother were badly used up and Ca]5tain Robbins was knocked down, but not seriouslv injured. The air was full of rocks, and things looked bad for a while. "The speaking was at one o'clock. Capt. J. Y . BemusdafTer, formerly a Union soldier, presided. Hendricks* spoke for an hour. McDonald fol- lowed. Both these men counseled against violence and adxised the men to obey the laws, but make their protests at the ballot liox. It remained for Judge Logan to fan the flame, and he did it successfully. His speech was highly inflammatory. He exhorted his hearers to preserve their God-given rights and not l)e trampled on. The war has degenerated into an aljolition raid. Hord followed Logan, attacking Governor Morton for squandering the people's money, etc. The meeting disjiersed quietly about three-thirtv, and about a half hour later the riot l^egan on the south side of the square, near the southwest corner. One Jesse Mvers, who was intoxicated, fired a 444 DECATUR COUNTY, IXDIAXA. pistol at Sergeant John Pierce, of W'ilder's battery, who was here on detaclied duty. ]\Iyers was arrested and taken to the office of Squire Bryan, on the south side, where the crowd congregated. "About this time one Allen G. Robbins hred a rexolver at some one in the crowd and ran. He was l)ur^ued Iw Sergeant fierce. Deputy City Alarshal ]\lan Zorger and others, at whom he fired back three times. Rob- bins was shot in the thigh, and ran into Will Pound's law office, three doors east of tl:e southwest corner of the square, where Zorger disarmed him. As Zorger turned around with Robbins's revolver, he found a re\olver pointed in his face by S. H. Logan. Some one, said to be Joe Drake, knocked Logan's arm up and he was shot in the abdomen. "This closed the performance, and those of the Copperheads who were able to get out of town were soon making rapid advances toward home." It seems that Judge Logan should bear most of the blame for the trouble, since it was his inflammatory speech which stirred things up. Those who are still living tell how the cavalry brigade from "Jagneck" and "Sand Creek" made a most ludicrous get-away when the tide turned against them. Some jumped on their horses at the court house rack and forgot to untie them in their excitement. Others crawled on their horses backwards and groped blindly toward the tails of their faithful steeds in a \ain effort to get hold of the reins of their Ijridles. Some never took the trouble to find their horses, but took to their heels in the direction of the tallest woods. Looking at the performance from a distance of fifty-two years, it looks like it must ha\e indeed been an exciting day. SOME civil. WAR STATISTICS. Decatur county furnished twenty-six companies of infantry and one battery, making in all about twenty-five hundred men. Deducting those who enlisted twice or more, it would appear that the county sent at least two thousand men to the front during the dark days of the Rebellion. Fifty-eight men from the count}' were killed on the battlefield, dis- tributed among the different regiments as follows: Seventh, twenty- four; Thirty-se\enth, eleven: Sixty-eighth, seven: Fifty-second, three: One Hun- dred and Twenty-third, nine. Six men of the Fifty-second were frozen to death on the cold Xew Year's day, 1864. Twenty-two died of wounds received in the service; twenty-two died in prison; one hundred and forty- Line died of diseases; two were drowned — making a total casualty list of two hundred and fiftv-one. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 445 During the progress of tlie war the comity Cdiiimissioners were aiitlmr- ized to offer bounties for enlistments and by the end of the struggle the county had expended one hundred seventy-one thousand six hundred dollars for this purpose. Some of the townships also oft'ered bounties for enlist- ments and tlie_\- cxpendeil twenty-li\-e thousand dollars along the same line. RELIEF FOR SOLDIERS' FAMILIES. A\'ithin the first week after the men went t(.) Indianapolis a subscription list was started for the support of soldiers' families. Amounts ranging from five to one hundred dollars, with a total of three thousand six hundred and seventy-five dollars, was raised in three days. The folhjwing subscribed one hundred dollars each to this fund: AI. D. Ross, B. H. Harney, J- F- Stevens, W. H. Reed, G. Woodfill & Sons, E. and L. P. Lathrop, T. M. Hamilton, Samuel Bryan, A. R. h'orsyth, David Lo\ett, D. and J. Stewart, J. P. Hittle, R. A. Hamilton, L. A. Donnell. J. S. Scoljey and John Ander- son. Our citizens deserve no small amount of credit for the liberal manner in which they contributed to the volunteers that went from this place. Besides the amount subscribed for the support of their families while the\' were gone, each one was furnished with a new blanket and two check shirts and four hundred dollars placed in the hands of the captains of the com- panies to be used to promote the comfort of the companies. All must acknowledge that Decatur did her whole duty. A relief committee, organized to look after the welfare of the soldiers' families, secured an order from the county commissioners that the county would pay a sum equal to that raised by pri^•ate sufiscription. This made the sum double $3,678, or $7,356, all of which was a\'ailable within the first week after the soldiers went to Indianapolis. B. H. Harney was secretary of the relief committee and A. R. Forsyth was treasurer. Because some advantages had been taken of the county commissioners in the matter of relief for soldiers' families, it was decided to discontinue this method of supplying relief and put the work in the hands of township trustees. This was done nine months after the war started, up to which time the sum of $7,777.89 had been paid out 1)\' the county commissioners. The county commissioners ]:)assed an order. August 14, 1861, for the relief of soldiers' families. Barton H. Harney, who hail been appointed chairman of the relief committee in April, was continued as such to look after Washington township. Commissioner John bloody was assigned Fugit 446 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. and Salt Creek townships, Daniel Beyer, Clinton, Adams and Clay and Wren Jackson, Sandcreek and Marion. As the war progressed it was found that a large number of the families were in need uf the necessities of life and provisions were made to take care of them liy the county at large as well as by the individual townships. Tiie county issued orders for relief to the amount of $128,582 and the townships spent Sjo.ogg more for the same purposes. Greensburg alone paid bounties to the amount of $6,000 and relief to the amount of $8,686. Besides these specific amounts paid out by the county, townships and the city of Greens- burg, the county and the city expended $1,500 and $40,000, respectively, for miscellaneous purposes. The grand total for the whole county, including the townships and city of Greensljurg, amounted to $401,863. A statement by the adjutant-general of the state on October 6, 1862, for Decatur county, discloses the followdng: Total men of military age, 2,884; total \olunteers, 1.353: total exempts, 432; total opposed to bearing arms, i ; total \olunteers in service, 888; total subject to draft, 2,451. Under the call for troops made February 7, March 4 and July 18, 1864, Decatur county furnished 1,012 men and filled its quota with the exception of two — one from Marion and one from Jackson township. Under the last call of I^ecember 19, 1864, the county furnished 173 men, a surplus of 16 above its quota. DECATUR COUNTY OFFICERS IN THE CIVIL WAR. Decatur county furnished about twent_\ -five hundred men for service during the Civil War and, because of gallantr\' on the battlefield, a number of them rose from the ranks and became commissioned officers. The list follows : COLONELS. James (ia\'in, Seventh Regiment, November 3, 1861 ; Seventy-sixth Regiment, July 25, 1862; One Hundred Tliirty-fuurth Ivegiment, ]\la_\^ 20, 1864. John T. Wilder, Se\enteenth Regiment, March 21, 1862; breveted brigadier-general, March, 1863; resigned, October 5, 1864. T. H. Butler, Fifth Cavalry, September 2, 1862. I. G. Grover. Se\'enth Regiment, .\]5ril 2T,. 1863: breveted brigadier-gen- eral, July 5, 1863. John S. Scobey, Sixty-eighth Regiment, September 21, 1863. W. C. Lemert, liightv-sixth Ohio, June, 1862. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. , 447 John C. McQuiston, One Hundred and Twenty-third Regiment, Marcli 7, 1864; hreveted hrigadier-generah March 13, 1865. Lemert was from Greenshurg and first enlisted as first hcutenant in Com- pany G, Seventh Indiana. He was promoted to the captaincy of his com- pany on December 20, 1861, and resigned his commission on June 3, 1862, to become the colonel of the lughty-sixth Ohio Regiment. MISCELLANEOUS OFFICERS. Ir\in Ixobbins, major, Se\enth Regiment; lieutenant-colonel, Sixty- eighth Regiment ; adjutant. Seventy-sixth Regiment. Thomas P. Spilman, major, One Hundred and Forty-sixth I^egiment. W. T. Strickland, major. Fifty-second Regiment. \\'. B. Harvey, adjutant, Thirt_v-seventh Regiment. Livingston Howard, adjutant. Thirty-seventh Regiment. D. C. Walters, adjutant and lieutenant-colonel, One Hundred and Thirty- fourth Regiment. A. J. Hungate, adjutant, One Hundred and Thirty-fourth Regiment. Dr. J. Y. Hitt. surgeon. Seventeenth Regiment. Dr. G. W. H. Kemper, surgeon, Seventeenth Regiment. Rev. David Monfort, chaplain. Sixty-eighth Regiment. Rev. D. R. Van Buskirk, chaplain. One Hundred and Thirty-fourth Regiment. Will Cumback, offered the lieutenant-colonelcy of Thirteenth Regiment, but declined it and took the rank of colonel, as paymaster in the army. DECATUR county's ROLL OF HONOR. No military histor}' of Decatur county would be complete without a complete list of its brave sons that ofifered up their lives on the altar of freedom that this nation might live. The following statistics show by regi- ment those who were killed in action, died of wounds, in prison or of disease. seventh infantry. Company D. Killed in action : Lieut. Robert Braden, by guerillas near Henderson, Kentucky, .\ugust. 1862, buried in Milford cemetery; Henry Bartee at Win- chester, March 2^^, 1862, Winchester cemetery; Asa Chapman, at Spottsyl- vania. May 12, 1864, Frederickslnirg cemetery; James C. Kellv. at Port 448 . DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Rcpuljlic. June 9, 1862, bndy not recovered; Will S. Owens, at Spottsyl- vania. May 12, 1864, Fredericksbnrg national cemetery; Samuel Thornburg, in Wilderness, May 5, 1864, body not recovered; Joab Shirk, at Port Repub- lic, June 9, 1864, body not recovered. Died of wounds: John McCian, June 12, 1862, wounded at Port Republic and buried there; John .\. Small, at Spottsylvania, May 14. 1864. Fredericksburg national cemetery. Died in jjrison ; Will Clendeuning. captured in Wilderness, died in Florence, Alabama, prison gra\e }ard ; Isaac Higgs, captured on secret expe- dition, died at Wilmington, Xorth Carolina. May 8, 1S64, prison graveyard; George W. Johnson, captured in Wilderness, died in southern prison; George W. Shirk, captured in Wilderness, died in Florence, Alabama, prison, Flor- ence national cemetery. Died of disease ; Sergt. Francis M. Wadkins, at Elkwater, November 2, 1861, buried there; Evan Armstrong, at Waynesburg, August 14, 1864, Waynesburg cemetery ; iMatthias Davis, at Cumberland. Maryland, March 15, 1862, Cumberland cemetery; John S. Gibberson, at Elkwater, November 9, 1861, buried there; John S. Lowry, near Milford, December 14, 1861, Dowry cemetery; Lsaac \^'. Pavy, at Culpeper, Virginia, Febrtiary 29, 1864, Culpeper cemetery; Will Smith, at Washington city, No\ember 17, 1863, Arlington cemetery; Sanuiel G. Wasson, at Elkwater, November 20, 1861. Inu'ied there; Prince Wimmer, at Strasburg, Virginia, April 12, 1862, buried there. Wounded, not fatall_\- ; Sergt. Anderson Griffey, at Petersburg, mus- teretl out with regiment; Pilgrim Cox. at Port Republic, discharged August 9, 1862; Andrew F. Flannigan, at Port Repulilic, discharged, dis- ability; William W'. Newton, at Petersburg, mustered out with the regiment; Thomas Mount, in Wilderness, mustered t)ut with the regiment; Isaiah Shafer, at Port Republic, discharged September 16, 1862; Andrew F. Simp- .son, in Wilderness, mustered out with the regiment; Lewis Striker, at Port Repu])lic, discharged, ilisability; Moses Sawyer, at IManassas Plains, dis- charged December 29, 1862; William Toothman. in W'ilderness, mustered out with the regiment; Joseph H. Voiles, at Cedar ^lountain, discharged, disability; Andrew J. AMieeler, in Wilderness, mustered out with the regi- ment; John W. Wolverton, at Port Republic, discharged h'ebruary 26, 1863. Co)iipaiiy E. Killed in action; Capt. George P. Clayton, in Wilderness, Ma}- 7. 1864, body not recovered; George W'. Michael, at Port Republic, June 9. 1862, DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 449 body not recovered; John Tlieodore, at Uniontown, Xovenilier, 1861 ; Albert M. \''orris. in Wilderness, May 5, 1864, body not recovered; James \V. Young, at Laurel Hill, May 8, 1864, Fredericksburg national cemetery. Died of wounds: George W. Meek, August i, 1864. at Petersburg, on battlefield. Died in prison : Daniel \Y . .\nderson, captured in Wilderness, died in Anderson\'iIle prison, date not known, .\nders(.)nville national cemetery; Uriah H. Barcla}-, captured in Wilderness, died in Andersonville prison, date not known, Andersonville national cemetery ; John W. Foster, captured in Wilderness, died in Anderson\-ille [prison, date not known, Anderson\'ille national cemetery: Peter L. Hamilton, captured at Weldon railroad, died in Anderson\'ille prison, September 6. 1S64. Anderson\-ille national cemetery; John H. Horn, ca])tured at \\'eldon railroad, died in Anderson\'ille prison, Februar}' 2. 1865, Andersonville national cemetery; Amzi T. Demaree, cap- tured in Wilderness, died in southern prison ; Samuel Level, captured in ^^'ilderness, died in Andersonville prison, date not known, Andersonville national cemetery; John Treniain, captured in Wilderness, died in Salisbury, Xorth Carolina, prison, November 11, 1864, Salisbury national cemetery. Died of disease: Sergt. Joseph N. Self, at Elkwater, December 6, i8'6i, South Park cemetery; John W. Campbell at Cumberland, Maryland, December 15, 1861, Cumberland cemetery; Amos G. Connor, at Grafton, West Virginia, January 9, 1862, South Park cemetery; Robert W. Christian, at Phillipi, December 8, 1861, South Park cemetery; Nathan F. Fiscus, at Cumberland, February 2, 1862, Cumberland cemetery; James M. Huffman, at Cumberland. April 2, 1862. CumberlantI cemetery; John W. Lo\'e, at Knoxville, Maryland, December 10, 1862, South Park cemeterv; James !\IcGrew, at Cumlierland, February 2, 1862, Cumberland cemetery; William Orders, at Cumberland. Feliruary 2, 1862, Cumberland cemetery; George Rolan, at Cumberland, January 3. 1862, Cumberland cemetery; John H. Sefton. at Cumberland, February 5, 1862, Shiloh cemetery. Clinton town- ship; Calvin C. Sisco. at Greensburg, March, 1862, South Park cemetery: Lafayette Sparks, at Cumberland, May 27, 1862, Cumberland cemetery; Hinkey Zook, at Fairfax, \'irginia, 1862, Arlington National cemetery. Wounded, not fatally : Dyar C. Elder, in Wilderness, arm and shoulder, mustered out with the regiment; Mortimer Burtch, accidental, discharged March 15, 1863: William L. Ford, in U'ilderness, knee joint, mustered out with regiment: Da\id Heifner, at North Anna river, mustered out with regiment : Ezra L. Lee. at Petersburg, mustered out with regiment ; George (29) 450 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Miller, at Port l\ei)ul)lic, discharged January i ", 1863; Matthew R. Porter, at Winchester, mustered out with rci^dnient : Perry S. Treinain, at Weldon railroad, in knee, discharged October 20, 1863. Company G. Killed in action : Sergt. David B. Gageliy, at North Anna river. May 25, 1864, buried on field; Joseph Beetem, at Petersljurg, June 18, 1864, buried on field I Benjamin Higdon, at Yellow House, August 21, 1864, buried on held; James Higdon, at Chancellorsville, May 3, 1864, T^redericksburg cemetery; Charles Jones in Wilderness, ]\Iay 5, 1864, body not recovered; Thomas McLaughlin, in Wilderness, May 5, 1864, body not reco\'ered; Daniel J. AlcCoy, in Wilderness, INlay 5, 1864, body not recox'ered ; John Patterson, at ]\Ianassas TMains, August 29, 1862, Arlington national ceme- tery; William T. Kyland, at Gettysburg, July 3, 1863, body not recovered; McCowan H. Smith, in Wilderness, May 5, 1863, body not recovered. Died of wounds; John X. Hann, wounded at South Mountain, died in hospital at Fredericksburg, Maryland, buried in .Antietam national cemeter_\- ; Sydney \\. Griswold, wounded at Winchester, died at Was]hngtrsie Bell, Ella Straisinger, Jane Stage, ]\Iary L. Hearne, Elizabeth Leswing, Martha J. Alyea, Stella Alyea, Catharine Jones, Rose Bruner, Matilda Davis, Margaret Johnson, Flora B. Theis, Mellie D. Drake, Louisa V. Knox, Martha E. Garrison, Mar\- W. Scobey, Ella Childs. Eliza J. Crisler, Cyrena White, Margaret Trusler, Margaret Conquest, Alice M. Dowden and Lottie M. Ehrhardt. Of this number, eighteen are living, nine have been called home, and seven have withdrawn. Our blessed Lord framei! a nieniorial to perpetuate His own meniury throughout all time when He said, "This do in remembrance of me." And when, in 1868. Gen. John A. Logan, then commander-in-chief of the Grand Army of the Republic, designated the 30th day of May for the purpose of "strewing with ti(.)wers the graves of those who dieil in defense of their country during the late rebellion, and whose bodies now lie in almost every city, village and hamlet cburch-_\-ard in the land," he builded for himself and them a memorial which will never disappear from American history. And, Ijelieving it fitting that the living should also be remembered, in 1890 the blower Mission was introduced, and like the mustard seed it has flourished, its Ijranches reaching almost three thousand corps. By it, many darkened homes and sad hearts have been made brighter. "For who so careth for the flowers, Will nnich more care for Him." During the past year "Pap"' Thomas Corps has expended for flowers for sick comrades and funerals, $65.85. Fifty-one orphans have been placed in the Soldiers' and Sailors' Orphans' Home at Knightstown, where they have every advantage of the children of well-to-do parents. .\ number of them now occupy positions of honor and trust. Six hundred and ninety (kjllars have been spent for relief, and nine hundred antl flfty dollars in necessaries for relief. Each year ten dol- lars is turned over to the post, and five dollars for ^Memorial day in the South and for the Christmas fund. The Greensburg schools have the ])roud distinction of being the first to adopt patriotic teaching as introduced by the Woman's Relief Corps. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 461 Two large flags, ten by twenty feet in size, have Ijcen fnrnishcd city schools : one hundred patriotic primers, and one hundred oleographs of the origin and history of the Stars and Stripes, with flag drills and patriotic selections, have been presented the teachers of Decatur county; and Dec- laration of Independence charts furnished each school in Washington township. Through the Woman's Relief Corps, a law was enacted by the Indiana Assembly in 191 1, by which every school in Indiana may be provided with a flag, if the teacher asks for it. DAUGHTERS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION. The Daughters of the American Revolution was organized on October II, 1890, in Washington, D. C, with eighteen members. The first presi- dent-general was Mrs. Caroline Scott Harrison, wife of Benjamin Harri- son, then President of the United States, which position she held at the time of her death, October 25, 1902. The late Mrs. Charles W. Fairbanks, also of Indiana, held this position from 1901 to 1905. The objects of the society are, to perpetuate the memory of the men and women who achieved American independence; the protection of histor- ical spots and the erection of monuments; the encouragement of historical research in relation to the Revolution and the publication of its results; the preservation of documents and relics, and of the records of the individual services of Revolutionary soldiers and jiatriots, and the promotion of cele- brations of all patriotic anniversaries; to carry out the injunction of Wash- ington in his farewell address to the American people, "to promote, as an object of primary importance, institutions for the general diffusion of knowl- edge," thus developing an enlightened public opinion and affording to young and old such advantages as shall develop in them the largest capacity for performing the duties of American citizens; to cherish, maintain and extend the institutions of American freedom; to foster true patriotism and love of counlry, and to aid in securing for mankind all the blessings of liberty. 462 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Any woman is eligible for meniljership who is eighteen years of age, and is lineally descended from a patriot, man or woman, who aided in establishing American independence. On March i, 19 15, one hundred fourteen thousand one hundred and sixty-six had l)een admitted to membership. There were one thousand four hundred and thirty chapters in the United States, and one each in Culja, Mexico and the Philippines. Memorial Continental Hall, at Washington, D. C, erected b}- the Daugh- ters of the American Re\'olution, at a cost of m(.)re than ti\-e hundred thousand dollars, is the only such buikling erected by women, and was built by volun- tary contributions, the chapters of Indiana contributing almost ten thou- sand dollars. It is of Vermont marble and in design and general appear- ance is a copy of the classic buildings of our Revolutionary period. The corner stone was laid on April 19. 1904, under the auspices of the Alasonic fraternity ; the gavel used was the one with which George \\'ashington laid the corner stone of the national capitol in 1793. In this building all docu- ments and records of the society are preserved, also priceless relics of the past. It is furnished throughout with magnificent old-time furniture and rare paintings, the gifts of chapters and indi\iduals. The continental con- gress of the national society is held in this l.)uilding. Lone Tree Chapter Xo. 743 was organized in Greensburg by the state regent, Mrs. William Guthrie, April 6, 1907, with the following charter members: Mrs. ]\Iary jM. Tarkington Alexander, Mrs. Lida Montgomery Cobb, Mrs. Elizabeth Montgomery Craig, Mrs. Emma A. Donnell, Mrs. Eliza McNabb Eddleman, Mrs. Maude Kitchin Johnson, Mrs. Ella Robbins Kitchin, Mrs. Juliet Spliker Lemon, Mrs. Alice Gray Markland, JNIiss Sarah Gageljy Montgomery, Miss Sue M. Montgomery, Miss Rebecca ]\Iontgom- ery. Miss Elizabeth Fulton Shirk, ■Mrs. Lizzie \\'oodtil Turner, Mrs. Pearl Kitchin Woodfil, Mrs." Eliza Talbott W'olverton, Annetta Wampler Shan- non, Mrs. Ensebia Craven Stimson and Mrs. Rose Hendricks Zoller. The first officers were Mrs. Ensebia C. Stimson, regent ; Mrs. Lizzie W. Turner, vice-regent ; Emma A. Donnell, secretary ; Pearly K. Woodfil, cor- responding secretary; Mrs. Eliza T. W'olverton, treasurer; Elizabeth F. Shirk, registrar, and Sue M. Montgomery, historian. The past regents are, Mrs. Stimson, Mrs. Turner, and Miss Donnell. The present (1915) officers and meml)ers are : Mrs. Jessie Riley, regent ; Mrs. Maude Kitchin Johnson, vice-regent; Mary \\'olverton, secretary; ]\Irs. Oliver Dickey Gilham, cor- responding secretary; Mrs. Irma Cory Douglas, treasurer; Rebecca ]\Iont- and Anna L. Riley, historian; Airs. Mary M. Tarking- DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 463 ton Alexander, Mrs. Mabel Kennech- Bainbridge, Sadie Baker, Hasnah Baker, Mrs. Elizabeth Gavin Bryan, Mrs. Lida Montgomery Cobb, Mrs. Elizabeth Montgomery Craig, Mrs. Eliza J. Stagg Crisler, Emma A. Donnell, Winona Crisler Deiwert, Mrs. Mollie Stoner Fogg, Mabel D. Foley, Mrs. Mary Spliker Haines, Grace E. Haines, Mrs. Flora Gaines Haas, Gertrude Haas, Airs. Ella Robbins Kitchin, Sue M. Montgomery, Mrs. Stella Green Rucker, Patience Rucker, Mrs. Etliel Riley Ryan, Mrs. Laura Gates Sefton, Flor- ence Sefton, Elizabeth Inilton Shirk, Mrs. Sarilda Robbins Smiley, Mrs. Ensebia Craven Stimson, Mrs. Lizzie Woodfil Turner, Pearl A. Williams, Mrs. Eliza Talbott Wolverton, Mrs. Pearl Kitchin Woodfil and Mrs. Rose Hentlricks Zoller. The chapter has lost, by death. Miss Sarah Gageby Montgomery, Mrs. Juliet Spilker Lemon, Mrs. Sarah Ann Gageby Montgomery, Mrs. Mary Jane Quick Mendenhall, Miss Bessie Craig and Mrs. Amanda Gagebv Sil- ing; by withdrawal, Mrs. Eliza AI. Eddleman, Mrs. Alice G. Alarkland and ]\Irs. Mary Hendee Fradenburgh : Iw transfer, [Mrs. .-Vnna G. Stagg Magill. At the last state conference. Miss Emma Donnell was elected state vice-regent, an honor well bestowed, and appreciated by the local chapter. On July 4, 1908, a large flag was presented to the public library, at which time an appropriate program was rendered. Markers have been provided for the graves of four Revolutionary soldiers, and ninety dollars contributed to the Memorial Continental Hall at Washington, D. C. The Michigan road, the most historic in Decatur county, will be marked with a handsome boulder bearing a bronze inscription tablet, to be presented to the citv on Flag day, June 14, 1916, as Lone Tree Chapter's part in the celebration of the anniversary of Indiana's admission into the Union. The committee in charge is Pearl A. Williams, Mrs. Eliza J. Crisler and Mrs. Ensebia C. Stimson. The jjoulder will adorn the triangular lot at the intersection of North Michigan avenue and Ireland street, and will be a lasting tribute to the honored pioneers and a spot where the present and future generations may pause in reverence to the memory of the sturdy ancestors who opened the way to the present advanced civilization. CHAPTER XTX. GERMANS AND THE GERMAN INFLUENCE. An account of the growth and development of Decatur county would be incomplete did it not make more than passing mention of the German influence that has been exerted there during the past three-quarters of a cen- tury. Germans were not the first settlers of the count}'. They were not the pio- neers who first wielded the ax and felled the forest trees. Their voice was not heard in the formative period of the county, their arri\-al being consid- erably later. German emigration from the Fatherland started in 1848, after the revolution there, and continued until the formation of the empire in 1871. In this score of years thousands of strong, self-reliant young men from Prussia, Hanover, Bavaria and the other German states poured into the United States. Dissatisfied with conditions at home and seeking a more perfect freedom, they came to this country intent upon establishing homes and remaining here. Local records of tiiese immigrants show that most of them remained. The Teuton came to the United States with the intention of following so far as possiljie the same occupation by whicli he made his livelihood in Germany. This was either in agriculture or in liusiness. Thrifty, industrious and frugal, all he needed was a chance to establish himself and his success w-as assured. Decatur county owes much to her German settlers. They came at a time when the best lands of the county were under culti\'ation and were producing profitable crops. The Germans did not seek this kind of land. What the}' wanted was that which could be purchased for a few dollars an acre,, land which was generally regarded as almost worthless at that time. They made their settlements in ^^larion and adjacent townships, where the poor woods-land abounds,. and started in to wrest from stubborn soil a liv- ing that would be adequate for their needs. A less self-reliant race would have flinched from the undertaking; a less competent people would ha\e failed entirely. But they persisted, build- DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 465 ing up the soil as best they could, guarding their slender savings and dili- gently striving to increase their stores. Today, a second or third generation has replaced many of these immigrants, and, practicing the same thrifty precepts inculcated by their sires and grandsires, ha\e made the soil respond kindly to their efforts, ha\e reared commodious barns and comfortable dwellings and made the one-time barren places resplendent with the yellow and gold of harvest time. Some who had busied themseh'es in the marts of trade in the F"ather- land, sought the city in preference to the rural community, engaged in mer- chandising and exchange, and built for themseh'es a reputation for honest dealing that is a dominant characteristic of the Teuton's contribvition to the great American "melting pot." The annals of Decatur county's Gernian-.\mericans are brief. Their names appear infrequently in the court docket. They ha\e rarely held or sought public office. They have industriously gone their several ways, minded their own Inisiness and permitted their neighbors to do the same without assistance or hindrance ; ha\-e reared strong sons and daughters and prepared them for efficient and useful citizenship. From the time Ala.ximillian Schneider laid (lUt the Uiwn of Alillhousen and named it Muhlhousen for the ancient niunicipalit\' in .\lsace, German influence in Decatur county has been none the less marked because of its indirectness. A people that does nothing Ijut set standards of living for the emulation of others has done enough. ' The roster of these German-American residents of Decatur county is too long for indi\idual discussion, but there are a few who may be taken as illus- tratixe of the entire list. One of the first among those living might be Louis Zoller, vice-president of two financial institutions and a successful Inisiness man. Born in Ijaxaria. he worked for a time in Berlin, and then came to the United States to try his fortune in this country. He engaged for twenty-one years in the butcher business and then became a partner in a Greensburg dry goods store. He is now retired from active business pur- suits, Init the example of his fine success cannot be altogether lost upon a younger generation. Barney Zapfe was one of the early settlers at JVIillhousen. He opened a store, made that store earn monew invested the money wisely and died possessed of a comfortable fortune. Barney Hardabeck — another early German-American — bought the first mill built at Millhousen. conducted a store and woollen mill and achieved financial independence. Joe and Tnlius (30) 466 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Rothschield, at Mil ford, conducted a store and woollen mill, treated the public fairly and honestly, and died wealthy. John Johannes, president of the St. Paul Building and Loan Associa- tion, started the manufacture of wagons and buggies there upon a small scale, worked earl}- and late, and is now possessed of a comfortable financial rating. John Puttmann, a leading citizen of Nevvpoint, owning a store and stone quarry and other property, started in life with nothing but the desire to succeed. George Metz, another Newpoint merchant, is also of Ger- man blnod. as is also John Hoff, successful business man of that place, Henry Schroeder, Sr., the oldest resident living in Salt Creek township, came from Germany to Decatur county, through Louis\-ille. Kentucky, a poor boy, and made his wealth by honest toil. Jc)hn Zollner and H. Kaby, who together monopolize the bakery busi- ness of Greensburg, are German-Americans. Daniel Silberberg, a German Jew, who recently died in New York City after accumulating a fortune, obtained his start to success in Greensburg. John Weimar came to the United States with little more than the shirt he wore upon his liack. He became a shoemaker in Greensburg and stuck to his last so consistently that when he retired a few years ago he found himself comfortably well-off. Charles Zoller was elected county treasurer in 1874. Henry Metz became one of the wealthiest farmers in Fugit township and once failed to be elected county commissioner by just one vote. Joe Herbert purchased the Millhousen ffour-mill from Barney Hardabeck and managed it with suc- cess and profit. And so the list might be run through its entirety. None of them achieved more than local distinction, but none of them fell into disrepute at home or abroad. They ran their mills, they garnered their harvests, they watched their tills and yet, withal, found plenty of time for recreation and for service. Decatur county's naturalization records exist only from 1867, when German immigration was at high tide and almost ready to subside. Since then two hundred and eighty men of foreign birth have been admitted to the pri\-ileges and duties of citizenship. Of this number, all but eighty- se\'en were born in Germanv. Following is the list complete: NATURALIZED CITIZENS. 1867 — Caspar Menkhans. Germany; Leopold Bahn, Russia; James Brehemg, England: Caspar Camm, Switzerland.; Henry Eichgara, Germany; John Miller, b'rance; Caspar A'oeka, Germany. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 467 1868 — Frederick Schroder, Germany; Ignatz Borchard, Germany; Henry Winker, Germany; Christopher Horstnian, Germany, Christian H. Winker, Jr., Germany; Christian H. Winker, Sr., Germany; Christian Horstnian. Germany; WiUiam Temaat, Prussia; Deidrick Hudler, Ger- many; George Schever, Germany; WilHam Buch, Prussia; G. Plenry Pott- niann, Ciermany; Nicholas Burgurgh, Germany; Henry Brinkmann, Ger- many; Henry L. Wynkes, Prussia; John W'ack, Germany; Solomon Ganz, Sachsen Weimar; Wendelin Fox, Germany; Henry Shaffer, Germany; John Laubanthal, Prussia; Barney Heidemann, Prussia; Henry Shrader, Germany ; Hugh Waters, Ireland ; William Rowman, England ; Raymond Loarkim, German}-; George Weber, Bavaria; Michael Hannon, Ireland; John Hannon, Ireland; Henr\- Macke, German)-; Louis Zoller, Bavaria; John Goed- ing, Prussia; Bernard Blenker, Prussia; Luke Moore, Ireland; William Brone, Hanover; August Buddemier, Prussia; Chris Mier, Hanover; Charles H. Mil- ler, Prussia; Frederick Brenner, Prussia; Frederick Miene, Prussia; Christ Chrisler. 1869 — Michael Zeigler, Germany. 1870 — Michael Hyland, England; Frederick Shrader. Prussia; Henry Heier, Prussia ; George Loslein, Bavaria ; Thomas Adams, England ; George Corscadden, Ireland; Henry Stretmier, Germany; George Acheson, Ireland; Barney Hoeing, Prussia; William h\ Deisher, Germany; Martin Madden, Ire- land ; Bernard Talkenberg, Germany ; Martin Monkendorf , Germany ; Andrew Little, England; Louis Schmitt, Bavaria; William Dews, England; Remick Wanner, Germany; John Schild. Switzerland; Herman Freising, Hanover; Henry Hight, England; Joseph Hollander, Bavaria; Peter Fonseth, Holland. 1871 — Casper Schnieder,, Germany; Thomas Brannon, Ireland; Bar- ney Fritz, Germany ; John G. Theurer, Germany. 1872 — Henry Schmidt. Germany; Frederick Bauer, Germany; Freder- ick Hoffman, Germany ; Daniel Davarn, Ireland ; Philip Borck, Germany ; Henry Schrieber, Germany ; Barney Tonyes, Germany ; I^Iichael Connally, Ireland ; John Metz, Germany ; Joseph Launderville, England ; Edward Ryan, Ireland; John Emmert, Germany; Adam Hartiges. Germany; Jiihn Math- ews, Austria; Huber Martin, Austria; Theodorel Frazer, England; Isidor Hock, Germany; Anton Ransch, Germany; Oswald, Switzerland; Joseph Stier, Germany; John Schroth, Germany; Frank H. Mayer, Germany; John F. Waldhans, Germany ; Thomas Smith, England ; William Rinking, Ger- many : Nicholas Schroth, Bavaria ; Diedrick Rilmeyer, German}- ; August Want, Germany; Frank IT. Holtmeyer, Hanover; Joseph Bouchard, France; John Klutz, Germany; Adam Erhart, Germany; Thomas Finn, England; William Ensemeier, Germanv; Leoa loly, France; William Brunkhorsh, 468 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Germany ; Charles I\Ieyer, ( lermaii y ; Joseph Edelstein, Russia ; Charles \'o]tz, Germany. 1874 — James Davis, Ireland: Anton Minster, Germany; William G. Gommett, Germany ; William Huddler. I'russia : Louis Hammer, Germany ; riiillip Kanarr. (icrinany; John Riley, Ireland: John Evans, Germany: John Smith, Sweden : Edward Stolle. Germany ; Frank Sieves, Germany : George Stahl, Bavaria ; Charles Grumbelbeck, Germany : L. Joseph Trilling, Prussia : ^lichael Greibhuhl, France. 1875 — George \\'endt, Prussia: William II. Wegener, (iermanv. 1876— Christian G. Alaisch, Germany; Ilenry Scherschligh, Prussia; George Bessler, Prussia; Tony Halter, France; Frank Wack, Germany; Benjamin Faust, Germany ; George Savaller, Canada ; Edward Roach, Ire- land; Rudolph Keller, Germany; Edwin Hillier, England; Sichmund Wachtel, Germany; Joseph Hegermann, Germany; John Coney, France; Abton Pfeifer, Germany; Peter Haunsz, Germany; Charles Kanarr. Germany; \'alentine Goskie, Prussia; Frederick Rentzelmann, Germany; Frank H. Meyer, PYance ; JMartin Date, Germany ; I-\'rdinand Pulking. German\- ; Edward Phillips, England; William A. Garrett, England; John Hornung, Germany; Alichael Clements, Germany; Alfred Maynard, England; Henry Fernading, Germany ; Jacob Clementz, France ; Harman Thieman. Ger- man)- ; Laurence Hook, German)-; Henry Esan-ian, Prussia. 1878 — Jone E. Jones, b'.ngland; John Myers. Germany; Reinhold Moehleissen, W'urttemberg; James Farrell, England; John Woods, Eng- land; Alexander Xeal, Wurttemberg; Joseph Esebett, France; Parks Tem- pest, Englantl ; James Fenn. Ireland: (."hristian Thrin. Germany; Henrv Link, Germany. 1880 — Patrick Kearns, Ireland; August Fincmann, Germany; John ]. Fauth, German)-; Joseph Bachebele, Germany; John \^^ Kemper. Germany; William Kuhn. Germany; John Thomas Hock, Germ;uiy ; Clement F. DeCroes, France: Henry M. N'ahlenkamp. (iermany; George Reisenweber. Germany; William Haase, Germany; Henry Haase, Germany; Ferdinand Kock, Germany. 1882 — Henry Niemann, Germany; Barney Moormami, Germany; Henry Moormann, Germany; Barney Kremer. Germany; (ieorge ]\Iiller. Germany: Thomas ^^'oods. Ireland; Signond Harsany. Hungary; Falinten Gutting, Germany; John Pohhnan, Holland; John B. Blankmann, Germany; \'alentine Bork, Germany; (ieorge Newberry, England: Joseph \\'uger- pfenig, Germany. 1884 — Gottlieb Holzwarth, Germany: Henr\- \\'eis, Germany; Joseph Parker, England; ]\Iartin Kelly, England; Jacob Knarr, Germany; Charles DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 469 Boahnka, Germany; I'atrick Griffin, England; Jolin \V. Melloh, Germany; Bvordem lische, Germany ; W'ilhelm Bachmann, Germany ; Henry Dreves, Germany ; John Woods, luigland ; Henry Ortman, Germany ; August Wucherpfennig, Germany; Rudolph Keller, Germany; Bernard Busche, Germany; Frederick O. Mobius, Germany; Frederick Pfeifer, Germany; Alfred Fggers. Germany; Christian Link, Germany. 1886 — John N. Stier, Germany; Michael Darmedy, Ireland; Herman Westerfield, Germany; \Villiam W'esterfeld, Germany; Nicholass Hennen- fent, -Germany ; Jacob M. F. Henrichs, Germany; Frank H. Vollmer, Ger- many; Clamor Seil^ert, Germany; Henry Seibert, Germany; Joseph Herel, Germany ; John Zollner, Germany ; Henry Kriger, Germany. 1888 — John Henry Picker, Germany; Joseph Litman, Germany; Henry Thielking, Germany; John Thompson, Scotland; John Ferlan, Germany; John Bessler, Germany; Henry Vogel, Germany; Henry W. Cosfoid, Eng- land; Louis Holler, Germany; Adam Knerr, Germany. 1889 — Albert Wucherpfebbig, Germany; Henry P. Welker, Germany. 1890 — William H. Barthel, Sweden; Christopher Miller, Germany;, Henry Rabjahns Lune; luigland; John Sicmer, Germany; John M. Krone., Germany. 1 89 1 — Fred \Veyt, Germany; Barney Hoeing. Prussia. ' i8q3 — Andrew Miller, Germany: Joseph Schnoitgoke, Germany; Jacob Leyenson, Russia; John Byer, Prussia; Joseph Byer, Prussia; Gustavo Wull- schleger, Switzerland ; Philip Thompson, England ; Joseph Moorman, Ger- many; John G. Mayor, Germany; John Adams, Germany; Carl Parsch, Germany. 1894 — Nicholas Rosenstengel, Germany; Joseph Lammardauk, Ger- many; William G. Haddade, Syria, Asia; Frank Plover. Germany; Jacob Bender, Germany ; .-\ugust Price, Germany ; John Geisel, Switzerland ; Clem Austing, Germany; Fred .\usting, Germany; John C. Stier, Germany; Mike Miser, Russia. 1896 — Lauvit H. Schelva, Norway; John Schneider, German\- ; Louis Levenstein, Russian Poland ; John Gettelenger, Germany. 1898 — John Kuert, Switzerland; Christian Weimes, Germany- ; .\lbert Keen, Germany. 1900 — James Donohue, Ireland. 1901 — Frederick Ehrhard, Germany. 1907 — Sam Levenstein, Russia. 1909 — Jacob Telles, Austria. 191 o — Henry Nieman, German3^ 191 2 — Johan W. Hilland, Sweden. CHAPTER XX. EARLY ELECTIONS IN DECATUR COUNTY. There is no more interesting field to the historian than that of poHtics and in no field is it so difficult to arrive at definite conclusions. It is natural that newspapers should set forth the virtues of the political party which they support and at the same time try to discount any possible merits which opposition parties might have. In the early history of our country this fea- ture was more pronounced than it is today, although there are still partisan papers which would ha\e their readers believe that their particular party had a monopoly on all the political wisdom of the country. In the days of Jackson, in the thirties and forties, party spirit ran high, and opposition papers vied with each other in vitriolic remarks. To the Jackson followers, John Ouincy Adams was the acme of aristocracy, the arch enemy of democ- racy and a man who hated the common herd. On the other hand, the fol- lowers of Adams pictured the old warrior as a Mephistopheles, a demon with a fire-brand in each hand and a man who would plunge his country into anarchy. Even gentle and unassuming as William Henry Harrison was, the Democratic papers made him out as a disciple of the Evil One, a man who made a diet of whiskey alone and a weakling who had neither brains nor courage. Such, in general, was the condition of politics up to 1840. STATE POLITICS (1816-24). The first vote for President in Indiana was taken in 1824. In 1816 and 1820 the Presidential electors had been chosen by the state Legislature. There were no clearly defined parties in the state during the eight years preceding 1824. All were followers of Jefferson and called themselves Republicans. However, no boss ever controlled a state more perfectly than did Governor Jennings the young state of Indiana. He lived at Jefl:'erson- ville, where he could take advantage of the anti-slavery sentiment and the desire of the people to move the capital to the center of 'the state. William Hendricks, of Madison, and Senator James Noble, of Brookville, were the other members of this earlv triumvirate. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 47X It was against these conditions the people of the state rose in rebelHon under Jackson — an attempt by the common people to take a hand in the government. The leaders tried to liead off the uprising, but were unsuc- cessful. Clay had a strong following in all parts of the state. It was thought the people could agree on him. Admirers of Clay got together and put an electoral ticket in the field. In the meantime the reputation of Jackson was rapidly spreading. His services in the Revolution, in the Creek War and at New Orleans helped, but his chief claim to popular support was the fact that he was not a politi- cian. "He knows nothing of politics," was the argument of his friends. Straw votes were taken at the county musters. At Richmond such a vote showed ii6 for Adams, T)7 for Jackson and 8 for Clay. One at Spen- cer, Owen county, gave Jackson 57; Clay, 42, and Adams, 9. One at Law- renceburg gave Jackson 305, Clay. 90, and Adams. 70. One at Indianapo- lis gave Clay 158, Adams 2, and Jackson 2. In Washington county a straw vote gave Jackson 88 out of a total of 132. Rursuant to call, the state convention of Jackson men met in the court house at Salem, September 18. 1824. Eighteen delegates, representing thir- teen counties, were present. Each delegate was required to present his properly signed credentials before being admitted. Samuel Milroy, of Wash- ington county, was made chairman. Jacob Call, of \''incennes, was made secretary. David Robb. Samuel Milroy, Elias McNamee, Jonathan McCartv and John Carr were placed on the electoral ticket. The platform was unique. It was, first of all, a eulogv of Jackson. He was heralded as the second Washington. Just as George Washington had shown himself a trusty statesman, so would General Jackson prove to be. Alexander, Caesar and Napoleon had tyrannized over a corrupt people. Jack- son came to rescue the people from corruption. The present officers, it was pointed out, were engaged primarily in petty thieving, and no less a master than Old Hickor}^ would be necessary to drive the monev changers from the temple. It would be interesting to know how the campaign was carried on, Init the records fail us. Jackson carried twenty-four counties and received 7.343 votes in the state. Clay carried twenty-six counties, with 5,315 votes. Adams carried two counties, with 3,093 votes. In general. Clay was supported by the politicians, .\dams by the settlers from the East and Jackson by those from the South. 472 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. FIRST PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION IN DECATUR COUNTY. Care has been taken to examine the early election returns in Decatur county, and below follow some interesting facts and figures: The following was the \'ote cast at the first election ever held for Presi- dential electors in Indiana, Xovember 6, 1824. There was no contest in 1820, when James Monroe was re-elected, hence no election. There could not have been an election in Decatur county anyway, because the county was not organized until 1822. Decatur county entereil the political arena l)y casting a preference for Henry Clay. There were only 144 \(_)tes cast in the county, as follows: Clay Jackson Adams Washington 41 52 11 Fugit 24 3 6 Sand Creek 700 Total yi 55 17 Plurality for Clay, 17. It will be observed that if the Adams men had xoted with the Jackson men, it would have lieen a tie. .Vdams township, which contained about the same number of voters as Fugit, was not counted by the returning board on the ground that the returns had not been properly made. The election com- missioners were Samuel Bryan, Andrew McCoy and Martin Adkins. The record was made to Henry H. Talbott, county clerk. \\\\n made out the report, which was duly signed by the three gentlemen named above. There is no list of the names of voters, which would be of interest had they lieen preserved. At this election, and also in 1828, Indiana was entitled to only five elec- tors. In 1832 the number was increased to nine, and Indiana began to cut quite a figure in national elections. THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION OF 1828. During the four years between 1824 and 1828 the \-oting population of Decatur count}' increased from 144 to 638, or more than fourfold. General Jackson was again a candidate, and. although he carried the state b)' 22,237 votes against 17,625 for .\dams, he did not carr}- Decatur county, although he did run a pretty good "hickory." DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 473 The vote was as follows : Adams Jackson Washington 259 211 Fugit 28 44 Adams 28 33 Clay 23 4 Total 346 292 Adams's majority, 54. Sand Creek township failed to record her vote, although she cast seven votes in 1824. The election commissioners were Ben Jones, Griffey Griffiths, Isaiah Kimble and William Hopkins. THE FIRST COUNTY ELECTION IN 1823. The first county election in Decatur count}- was held on Alonda}-, August 4, 1823. to elect a state senator for eight counties, Marion, Madison, Hamilton, Johnson, Henry, Rush, Shelby and Decatur; a member of the House for four counties, Henry, Rush, Shelby and Decatur ; a county commissioner, and to decide whether a convention should be held. For senator, John Brison led with 163 votes; James Gregory, 76; S. G. ■Mitchell, 21 ; scattering, 7. For representative, William Hendricks, 126; John Hopkins, 82; Griggs, 24, Glass, 10. The vote for commissioner was as follows: Washington Fugit Adams William Parks 125 13 i William Henderson 6 61 40 James Long 14 i 2 Total 145 75 43 For convention, 43. Against convention, 208. Parks had Ijeen ajjpointed one of the first three by Governor Jennings. The other two members were Seth Lowe and William Harbard. There were then only three townships. Washington township was in the center and ran from east to west, the entire breadth of the county, embracing what is now Marion, Sand Creek, Jackson, Clay, Washington and Salt Creek 474 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. townships. Fugit had its present limits and the eastern half of Clinton town- ship. Adams embraced its present territory and the western half of Clinton township. It is interesting to note how sparsely settled the county must have been at that time. Washington township cast only 104 votes in 1824. Prob- ably half of these voters lived outside of the then struggling little village of Greensljurg, which could not possibl}- have had a population of over 300 souls, and was (mi!\- two and a half years old. FIRST TOWNSHIP ELECTIONS. The first election of any kind held in the count)- was the townshii) election hekl on June i. 1822, to elect justices of the peace. Two justices were elected in Washington and one in each of the other townships. In Washington the election was held at the home of Thomas Hendricks, with Richard Hall as inspector; in Fugit at the home of Thomas Throp, with Isaac Darnell as inspector; in Adams at the home of Edward Tanner, with Paul Brown as inspector. \Villiam Miller and William O. Ross were appointed constables for Washington; Henry Hobbs for Fugit, and Solomon Robinson and Daniel Howard for Adams, by the county commissioners. PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION OF 1 832. In 1824 Henry Clay received "ji votes in the county, Andrew Jackson 55, and J. O. Adams 17. In 1828 J. Q. Adams received 346 and Jackson 292. It will be observed that the pioneer fathers and grandfathers of Decatur county showed a decided preference for Henry Clay and the ^^'hig party. The voting pujjulation was increasing rapidl} . In 1832 the \'Ote was as follows : Clay Jackson Washington 429 276 Fugit 40 16 Clinton 19 9 Adams 22 34 Clay __■ 20 41 Sand Creek 9 29 Total 539 405 Clay's majority, 134. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 475 Marion township was organized, but did not vote for some reason. The vote in the state was: Clay. 15.472; Jackson, 31,552. PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION OF 1836. It was not until 1836 that all the townships lined up and voted for Presi- dent. The result was as follows : Harrison \^an Buren Washington . 590 274 Fugit 98 54 Clinton 24 19 Adams 97 34 Clay : 67 75 Jackson 20 7 Sand Creek 31 35 Marion 8 i Salt Creek 15 n Total 950 513 Harrison's majority, 437. Harrison carried the state with 41,281 votes to 32,480 cast for Van Buren, but the latter was elected. In 1840 the total vote again got a big boost, and the Whig majoritv con- tinued to increase. Clay and Jackson townships were the only ones that went Democratic. The result was as follows : Harrison A'an Buren Washington 729 331 Fugit 100 43 Clinton y^i 4^ Adams 117 66 Clay 61 94 Jackson 24 31 Sand Creek 96 96 Marion 52 21 Salt Creek 46 35 Total 1.298 759 Harrison's majority, 539. 4/6 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Harrison again carried ihe state with 65.362 votes to 51,695 cast for \'an Bnreu. The vote in Sand Creek townsliip at this election was a tie — 96 to 96. PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION OF 1 844. Clay Polk Washington 615 380 Fugit 132 87 Clinton 54 16 Adams 128 107 Clay 87 157 Jackson 39 74 Sand Creek 109 171 Marion 62 62 Salt Creek 49 37 Total 1.275 1.091 Clay's majorit}'. 184. DECATUR COUNTY ELECTION IN CI\'IL WAR. Party spirit ran high during the Ci\il War and personal encounters on election day were of very frequent occurrence. On October 14, 1863, an election was held f(.ir state and county cifficials, and. although the state went Democratic, Decatur returned a majority for the Union ticket. The vote in the county was as follows : Union Democratic [Majority Secretary of state 1.834 1.674 159 Congress 1.856 1.673 ^73 Representative 1.827 1.685 142 Sheriff 1.840 1.672 168 Treasurer 1.848 1.664 184 Commissioner first district 1,827 1.666 161 Commissioner second district 1,827 1,662 165 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 477 The vote by townships for secretary of state was as follows: Union Democratic Washington 609 259 Fugit 220 132 Clinton 79 54 Adams ^ 206 196 Clay 196 226 Jackson 130 217 Sand Creek 11 1^ 228 Marion 12^ 245 Salt Creek 154 ng Total 1,834 1,675 Union majority, 159. CONGRESSIONAL VOTE. Colonel Ga\in, for Congress, carried this county by 173 and Ohio by 7. The other counties went for Holman, who was re-elected by 2,934. Even Rush county ga\-e Holman 208 majority. The state went Democratic bv 9,591. The Democrats elected seven members of Congress, while the Union party got four, Julian, Dumont, Orth and Colfax. The Democrats had Law, Cravens, Harrington, Holman, Voorhees. Edgerton and McDowell. COUNTY OFFICIALS. D. R. VanBuskirk, for representatix'c, defeated Captain Bemusdaffer by 142; Philip Mowrer defeated W. H. Carroll by 168; James Morgan, for treasurer, defeated William A. Manlove by 184; Abel Withrow, for coroner, defeated J. M. Watson by 171; Morgan James and Wren Gray- son were elected commissioners by 161 and 165, respectively. The result of the electi(jn in Decatur county was very gratifying to the Union party. Over a thousand men were absent in the army at this time. Practically all of them would have supported the Union ticket if thev had been at home. 4/8 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION OF 1860. The election of i860 was one of the most bitterly contested in the whole history of Decatur county, coming as it did on the eve of the Civil War. As will be seen from the accompanying table, Lincoln carried all but three townships, while the Republican majority over the Douglas Democrats was 482. Breckenridge received only 93 votes in the whole county, and Bell, the candidate of the Constitutional-Union party, received only 20 votes. The vote by townships for Lincoln and Douglas was as follows : Lincoln. Douglas. Washington township 605 254 Fugit township 280 120 Clinton township 82 62 Adams township 227 186 Clay township 213 261 Jackson township 161 201 Sandcreek township 144 180 Marion township 151 215 Saltcreek township 165 127 Totals 2,028 1.546 CHAPTER XXI. LITERARY GLIMPSES. It may be a surprise to many to know that Decatur county has produced se\eral people who have courted the muses, but when a request for original verse for a chapter in this volume was made, a hearty response came from all parts of the county. While it is not possible to reproduce all that has been submitted, yet sufficient is given in succeeding pages to convince the most skeptical that the county has some who can at least "lisp in num- bers." It may be true that some of the lisping is not up to the Shakespearean standard, but there is satisfaction in knowing that many people in the county have made an effort to emulate the immortal Bard of Avon. The author does not presume to say that all of the verse submitted has real poetic merit; it is given for what it is worth, without any comment, and the reader may ])e the judge of its value. The late Will Cumback is one of the prominent writers the county has had, and some of his verses have the true poetic gift. As an orator and statesman, he is better known to those familiar with Indiana's famous men than as a poet. But though the number of poems which he wrote was not large, they were all of a character which made them a factor for happiness with all who read them. Mr. Cumback was born in Franklin county, Indiana, March 24, 1829. Being reared on the farm, his early educational advan- tages were limited. Studying law and beginning its practice, he soon attained considerable reputation as a public speaker. When liarely twenty- five he was elected to Congress. Following that he was presidential elector, paymaster of the army, state senator, lieutenant-governor and collector of internal revenues. During all the time that he was serving in public office he wrote many articles for newspapers and spent much time lecturing. Perhaps his best poem is "Memory's Banquet." In part, it is as follows: I am banqueting tonight — Not with wassai! and with wine, Not with eating and with drinking. At a bacchanalian shrine; For in my lonely chamber Where the shadows and the light Are quaintly crossed and checkered, There I'm banqueting tonight. 480 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. In tlie hush and in the stillness Of the quiet midnight hour, I said to memory, "Bring me The best you have in store ;" And the feast was spread before me. And the present took her flight, While the past and I made merry With our banqueting tonight. And the comfort and the kindness That loving hearts have given, Making life to me the prelude Of the higher joys of heaven; Sat at the board and cheered me, Making life a great delight. As I drank the cup of memory In my banqueting tonight. A SABBATH DAY. By Will Cumback. Like a mother's kiss to the weary child. Like the calm sea waves, raging and wild; Like rest, sweet rest, to tired feet; Like joy's sweet dream while sorrows sleep; Like dew upon the drooping flower; Like hope in a despairing hour; Like joyful news from those we love; Like benedictions from above, Comes the Sabbath morn to me. Smiley Fowlt-r, wlio i.s now on the editorial staff of the Grccnshurg Nezcs, has written many poems, stories and feature articles for papers, which ha\e been co])ied in newspapers throughout the country. He collabo- rated with George Gary Eggleston in the latter s no\'el, "Jack Shelby," the scene of the story being parth' laid in Decatur county. He has published serially a newspaper "Literati of Indiana," in which he reviewed the work of some twenty authors of the state. He now has in preparation a \olume entitled "The Quality of Recent American Verse," taking up the period between the death of \Miitman and W'hittier and the present time. He in- tends to publish a small collection of his verse within the next few months. Two of his most striking poems are given. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 48 1 THE SYLVAN FANE. We walk again beside the sylvan streams, And seek anew the love-god's rustic fane We built him in the fleeting May-time dreams — Beyond the pale of glory and of pain. I come from far across the world, from land Of eternal snows and plains of hellish heat; And you from scenes I do not understand — Of gild and ease, half bitter and half sweet. Oh, I am weary with the march of men Upon the great white road. My feet are sore, And long to walk in shaded lines again. Where I may dream of failure nevermore. My ears are filled with woful monodies Of alien muses. Threnodies have drowned The joyous primal anthem, such as rise To dying ears in only less than sound. My love, your face is pale ! How sweet to rest Your eyes on these old stable things ! Forgetting evermore the ancient jest Of tinselled crowns and pomp and puppet kings! Now once again the leaden mistS uplift. Revealing hills where reinless fancies rove; And o'er the boundary of Time we drift. Together to the lyric realm of Love. A SON OF ADAM. If I would know myself, it is Of ancient Clio I must seek; Then let me rest not till I reach Her clouded shrine and bid her speak. A son of Adam, I should lose My perfect Eden. I shall wrest From him the secret of myself — With Eve to aid me in my quest. I feel somewhat of Plato now Within my strange, unconquered soul, Still groping toward the light that gleams Beyond the portal of my goal. <3i) 482 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. I am Thomas, who would not believe Until he touched Him with his hand. I am rash, avenging .\bsalom ; And faint-heart spy to th' promised land. Delilah yet can bind my arms, And win my secret with her smile. Yea, even Rome would I forget To please the sorceress of the Nile. One of the most prolific versifiers of the county was the late Elmer E. Aleredith. Born at .Sardinia, December 21, 1864, he graduated at DePauw University in 1887, became a lawyer at Muncie, Indiana, but was soon com- pelled to forsake his profession and go to Colorado in search of health. He married Carrie Wynn in 1894, but lived only three years afterward, dying at his father's home in Sardinia. He was a young man of much promise and had alread}' made a name for himself in his chosen profession. He wrote a large number of dialect poems for newspapers, and showed a genuine poetic gift. He was a member of the Western Association of Writers. Two of his poems are given. CIDER MAKIN' time. The dear old cider makin' time is a comin' round agin, An' I feel so awful tickled that it seems almost a sin; Fer onct I heard the preacher say, with face twelve inches long, "When little chaps get tickled they's surely sumthin' wrong;" But I can't help bein' happy, when I see the orchard trees Jist a breakin' down with apples, an' I hear the hummin' bees Gittin' just so drunk on cider, that they gether everywhere. That they stagger in their flyin' an' wobble through the air. No matter what the preacher says, it surely is a crime Fer boys to not be tickled in the cider makin' time. Oil, it's fun to get up airly on the cider makin' day! The air's so stimulatin' it drives the blues away, An' makes a feller go about a singin' everywhere With heart so light an' happy that he doesn't think o' care. It's fun to bring the apples, them big" red Northern Spies, That make such jolly dumplin's an' big fat juicy pies, An' the russets an' the pippins, some sweet an' others sour — Oh, I love to set an' smell 'em an' taste 'em by the hour. Then the grindin' of the apples is a mighty pleasant sound. When some other feller's muscles makes the heavy wheel go round. An' the drippin' an' the pourin' of the cider in the tub. When they put the pressure on it, is a purty rub-a-dub. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 483 At last we git the barrel full an' then we have to stop And turn it on its bosom with the bunghole on the top. Then comes the sweetest pleasure that mortal ever saw, Of suckin' hallelujah through the bunghole with a straw. I know you'll all forgive me for borin' you with rhyme, Fer I feel so awful jolly in the cider makin' time. DEACON JONES S MELON PATCH. In the sultry days uv August When the corn begins ter shoot, An' the thrashin' injine's whistle Everywhar begins ter toot, An' the great big yaller apples In the orchard smell so sweet, Then I love to sit a-thinkin' ■ In the great old rustic seat, While I rest frum diggin' taters — Fer the sun is bilin' hot An' my shirt is all a-drippin'; Not a single little spot But is wringin' wet an' steamin' — Thar I set an' fall ter dreamin' An' my heart swells up with joy. At the 'membrence of mischief W'en I wus a boy. Thar I love ter set a musin' An' a thinkin' uv the past. While the mem'ries come a oozin' Through my noodle quick an' fast, Then a gentle, sweet sensation Seems ter run through all creation; An' a pleasant kind uv feelin' Over all my senses stealin'. Calls up pictures uv my childhood By the little laughin' stream. That meandered through the wildwood Like the shadder uv a dream. Down thar in the strip of bottom, Runnin' up an' down the crick. Deacon had 'is patch uv melons. An' they growed so tarnel thick That we couldn't walk among 'em Without trampin' on the vines, An' we boys could hardly find a place Ter hide away the rines. No, nothin', sir, could hold a match Ter Deacon Jones's melon patch. 484 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Many things I now remember That I loved when but a boy; An' I call 'em up before me With a sweet and touchin' joy. Oh, I loved the dear old orchard An' I liked the medder, too, An' the pond down in the pastur ^^'har the worter lilies grew; But all these things were not a match Fer Deacon Jones's melon patch! The Deacon wus a stingy cuss. Always gittin' up a fuss, Prosecutin' an' a suin' Fer trespassin' an' fer theft. An' a threatnin' uv the ruin That he'd scatter right an' left; An' sometimes he kep' 'is promise When he caught us boys by chance Stealin' through his bottom ground. Then he made a smackin' sound With 'is cane upon our pants. Though all things else I may forgit One mem'ry sure will linger yit An' kinder make me scringe an' twitch An' make my trousers smart and itch; Though all things else may pass away I'll feel until my dyin' day The lickens that I uster catch In Deacon Jones's melon patch ! Now when I think uv them dear joys, I almost b'lieve I'm with the boys A goin' on another lark An' stealin' melons in the dark; But no, now sence I come ter think — The idee ftlmost makes me shrink — Them days wus long, long years ago, My har is turnin' like the snow. The boys with whom I uster play Have long sence died an' passed away. An' my time, too, is comin' soon, I know my life is past the noon. But when my soul shall fly away Fer glory on my dyin' day, I'll jist look down and try ter catch A glimpse of Jones's melon patch. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 485 A number of poems have been submitted, but no data of the authors being obtained the poems are given witliout any personal mention of the composer. A RETROSPECT. By Henry C. Hodges. When life' bright, pleasant vestibule, With flowers and morning sunshine decked, Is seen through corridors of years Its beauty grows by retrospect. Our school days thus will e'er appear; Outlined within the past they shine, The fairest, sweetest picture there. Its radiant glow, a light divine. TAKE HEED. By WUliam T. Zetterberg-. There's one thing in the United States That's an evil from start to finish. It ought to be against men's taste To allow that thing to replenish. Of course there will be some men kick; Not because they are in the right, But because they are on the trick Of selling votes just for the mite. This, you know, is a very great sin. But there is one greater than it. Which causes a great many to go in Where they can't never o'ercomc it. The drinking of whisky is this. That makes so many homes go bad; That's the reason the money is amiss For food and things that should be had. Show me the man that drinks liquor Every time he can get the stuff. I will show you where he is lacker In carrying on his big bluff. Is he any better socially While his mind is all out of whack? Is he making a standard, really, In which other people ought to track? 486 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Say. drinker, would you just like to see Your sister or dear old mother In a saloon drinking their tea And quarreling with one another? I say this for the habit drinker, He is not thought of the least in the world ■ By people who do not tinker, This, surely, you have all been told. Then is there some economy That tends to make the people spend The whole of their past week's money On that which life does not depend? Is it teaching the boy such habits That will make them good gentlemen? The kind the world should have in it, And be something like chosen men. Men, are you of the drinking kind. Who think such things should fill the air? Say, people, do you think you'll find Saloons and tigers Over There? The last of all I have to say Is just go to the polls and cry, "I'm all and all for the right way. So I will cast my vote for 'Dry.'" THE OLD HOMESTEAD. By W. M. Gard. Oft as I muse there comes to me Visions of that long ago, Across life's changing, shoreless sea Of the friends I used to know. Pure as the breath of flowers that bloom When the chill of winter is o'er; Sweet as fields of clover in June — All those tender memories are. But those memories never come So fresh and full as when the day Grows hazy, and the winter sun Pursues his solitary way Low down through the lone, southern sky- O'er fields that are buried in snow — And the glad holidays are nigh, And the world with love is all aglow! DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 487 Once more I see the rocks and hills, The dear Old Homestead and farm; The dark woodland and the rills And shocks of the gathered corn. I hear the pheasant's drumming call And the "whirr" of the startled quail; There's the old elm tree and the waterfall, And the spring never known to fail! But those I loved are there no more; Strangers now dwell in their place; I sigh for the happy days of yore And one glimpse of a vanished face! For the simple faith of childhood dear In that quaint, old Santa Claus, With his tiny sleigh, and blithe reindeer Loaded down with gaudy toys ! For other hearts the bells shall ring. For them the violets bloom; And they shall hail the lovely spring, The azure skies of June; But there shall come to me no more Those happy days gone by. Till I shall reach that other shore — My "Homestead" in the sky! The following little piece of humorous verse was published in the Indianapolis Sentinel during the Spanish-American War, and the names of local persons (as history recalls) were analogous to those prominent in the newspaper dispatches at the time. j\Ir. Stewart was at that time a reporter ■on a Greensburg paper. For a number of years he has been the Washing- ton correspondent for Eastern papers, occupying a high position. DENNIS. By OrviUe H. Stewart. (To Master Dennis Donald Webb, son of Merritt Webb, of Adams, Indiana.) His father called him Dennis; His mother called him Don; But never could the same name His parents agree upon. When into a boy he grew And he went to school, then Half the scholars called him Don And the others called him Den. 488 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. So it was Den and Don, Whether at ball or tennis ; But since Merritt whipped the Dons His name now is Dennis. THE GRAPEVINE SWING. By W. A. Kirkpatrick. In the silent night, when the witches steal Through my drowsy brain and break the seal Of doors long closed on forgotten things, 'Tis my youthful days the dream fay brings. And the memory most dear to me Is a grapevine swing in an elm tree. Where, perched in the vine, by my sweetheart's side, We would sit and swing until the old cat died. O Father Time, you travel too fast for me; Take me back to my boyhood days so free; Hang up your scythe, forget you're off the track. Turn your hour-glass on the other end and let the sand run back, For I want to close my eyes and see That grapevine swing in the elm tree. On summer nights, when the wind sang low. And the air was flooded with the moon's pale glow; When the bullfrog bugled his mellow bass From the reeds that grew in the old mill race, Where the limpid water, like a silver sea, Reflected the shadow of the vine and tree — Then I forgot the world held anything But my sweetheart's form in the grapevine swing. GOOD BYE, OLD HOME, GOOD BYE. By W. A. Kirkpatrick. Have you forgotten, dear, the time 'most fifty years ago, When to this house we came to stay. I loved you then, you know. And all the years that we have lived beneath its sheltering eaves Have been filled up with blessings that no pain or sorrow leaves. But now the home is sold and we, although our hearts are sore, Will never have the right again to enter that old door; We'll have to bid farewell to all that every night and day A paradise has been to us. but as we go we'll say^ Good bye, old home, good bye, how hard it is to leave. The joys and bliss you gave to us, may others now receive. No matter where our feet may stray, or where our heads may lie. You'll always be for us a shrine, Good bye, old home, good bye. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 48^ How well do I remember, dear, the place you used to sit, When in the evening work was done, and you would sew or knit, 'Twas in the chimney corner there, beside the mantel tree That held the clock which told the time so long for you and me. But that old clock will never tell for us the passing- hours. And your old chair went with it when they sold this home of ours. There's nothing left to keep us here, so we will go away. And as we leave this sacred spot, we'll bow our heads and say — When you first came to this old home your cheeks were like the rose, Yours eyes were like the violet t'nat in the valley grows. Your face is old and wrinkled now, but looks as young to me, Try as I may, your girlish form is all that I can see; You're worn out with the cares of life, your hair is thin and gray. But love for me looks from your eyes as on our wedding day. If I could bear for you the pain that lines your tear-wet cheek, I'd gladly give my life for you. and say in accents meek — ■ The flowers in the garden, dear, will miss your tender care, The birds will hunt in vain for crumbs you always scattered there. And out beneath the maple tree upon the little mound. Some other hand will plant, perhaps, a rose when spring comes 'round. So put your hand upon my. arm, don't cry, dear heart, don't cry, There must be somewhere in this world a place for you and I, Where we can rest our weary feet, the short time we've to stay, But if we never find that spot our hearts will always say — THE OLD BL.\CK SHAWL. By Mrs. Delia White Jlarkland. 'Tis not a handsome thing to see, 'Tis spoiled, old and brown, Though it was black as night could be When first it came from town. 'T^vi'as large and ample in its folds; We bought it in the fall. But then it had not grown to be The old black shawl. In rain or shine, through heat or cold. In clear or cloudy weather. We've worn it individually And worn it all together. For twenty years 'twas one of us. And served us one and all. Oh, we'll ever have a reverence for The old black shawl. In winter time when sleighing's good, We've wrapped in furs and cloak. With robe, and rug, and woolen scarf. Until it seemed we'd choke. 490 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. We hear a voice behind us, 'Tis mother's in the hali : "I think, my dear, you'd better take The old black shawl." And in the summer, if perchance A cloud was in the sky. Or summer breezes blowing In the wheat or in the rye; If one of us were starting out We're sure to hear the call, "For fear it rains, you'd better take The old black shawl." When we picnicked on the grass, 'Twas formed into a seat Or a pillow for the head. Or a carpet for the feet. Where'er we went, whate'er we did, I think that one and all Felt we were not equipped without The old black shawl. If one of us lie down to rest Or fell asleep while nursing, 'Twas over us spread by some kind hand Without our thought or choosing. When mother's sight was nearly gone. And o'er fell the pall, To shield from light those eyes, we brought The old black shawl. And when her sight restored again, How thankfully, how tender We placed it round her feeble form, Naught could excel its splendor. And later on, when boys and girls Were grown and married all, Then grandpa put the babies on The old black shawl. And when to boys and girls they'd grown, 'Twas formed into a saddle V- * For Dobbin's back, and to the barn They rode on it a-straddle. For tent, for playhouse, or for show. For masquerade or ball, Methinks no usefulness escapes The old black shawl. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. But now we sadly lay it by, Touch it with reverent fingers. For added to these memories Is one that with us lingers. Of saddest hours, of darkest days. And the Death Angel's call, Since mother's gone we've laid away The old black shawl. THE OLD WATER MILE. By Mrs. Delia White Markland. In fancy I view it — the old water mill That stood tall and grand, at the foot of the hill. The glad happy song of the soft rippling stream. Like a lullaby, comes to me now in my dream; The old mill dam, glistening bright in the sun That scattered its gems on the waves as they run. The big water wheel that we wondering saw. With its splatter, and rush, as we viewed it with awe; The kindly old miller with dust covered o'er, Whose jolly voice came to us through the roar. And rattle and clatter of belt, wheel and stone, When we played on the mill, in the days that are gone. Up the long stairs was the railroad. That carried the grain from the wagon's load. At the old mill door, on the horse's back. The freckled faced boy, with corn in a sack. That was shelled by hand the night before, By the dear home folks on the kitchen floor. He bashfully stands and waits around, Or plays in the stream till his grist is ground. And the corn we parched on the office stove, We'll never forget where e'er we rove. Our laughter all through the mill was heard, As the sweet brown corn we stirred and stirred. Then we hunted for pennies the miller so sly Had dropped jus.t to see the glad light in our eye As onward we scampered, still searching for more, And wondering how ever they got on the floor Then we waded knee deep in the old tail race, Or fished with long poles, and tan on our face. 491 492 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. As we breathlessly watched for a "nibble" and took With screams of delight a fish from our hook. Then the old spring house, and peppermint fine. Where we made long curls of the first dandelion. There the birds sang all day, and the soft summer breeze Seemed laughing with us, 'neath the wide-spreading trees. But gone with the past, as new scenes come in view, Is the water mill, and joys that we knew, With the dear ones that loved us, and lived with us then Who will walk this world with us, ah ! never again, But the sweetest memories of life linger still Around happy days in the old water mill. THE TREE. ON THE TOWER. By Lida JI. Cobb. Beautiful tree upon the tower, Though your lot be cast on high. Where the town clock tells the hour And storms sweep from the sky. To thee we lift our wondering eyes And beholding, proudly say Thou art one of nature's wonders Within thine own unique sway. None know how thy roots are nurtured, All are guessing and some do say Thou art a fake, but every one Admires thee when they pass this way. There is much inquiry about thee From all sections of the earth. But no one can ever conceive From whence came thy lofty birth. You are surely enthroned in grandeur. As your branches wave on high. But we know you are only transient And must some day droop and die. With the leaves of the wild wood Your bright garment, too, must fade And come fluttering down to earth To mingle in death's silent shade. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 493 Yet, with pride, we now behold thee And friends and strangers, if they will, May come and view our lone tree Towering on and upward still. When, like all earth, you have perished. Leaving naught but your good name, Still in history you'll be known As the Greensburg tree of fame. Some extracts of Lewis A. Harding, the editor of this volume, have been incktded at the request of the pubHshers and his many personal friends in the county. They are taken from his volume, "The Call of the Hour," and printed with the permission of the Sunflower Publishing Company, Wichita, Kansas. • THE GREAT FOUNDATION. Written on the Burning- of a Tabernacle. Hark ! The alarm ! It is fire ! Fire! Fire! Fire! Look! People run ! Hear the bells ! v Fire! Fire! Fire! Fire! Oh! See the smoke ! Can it be ! But alas ! The Tabernacle! — The Tabernacle is on fire! Ah ! then men hurry quickly to and fro, And desperate firemen dash in maddened iiight And pallid faces like the sullen snow. In terror gaze on that unwonted sight; While every heart is strained with fear, for soon Those clouds of black, then whitening smoke, sliall doom It all to direful flames and ashy ruin! Behold, on yesterday what splendid pile. When sunrise lit. the windows of its dome With all the fresh, fine beams of morning; while At evening, all the twilight of the gloam Seemed caught and held up there in those rich panes To linger as the shadows mounted higher, And then in silence when the westland wanes. At last to mount toward heaven from the spire ! 494 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. But now, behold, what awful pity! Ah — Tliose sacred windows and the splendid wall, Tliat lofty arch and all the fine eclat. Are scorching with the smoky heat; and all That splendid dome, with heaven-pointing spire. Is wrapt in smoke; and falling windows fly To pieces; while above, red tongues of fire Leap wildly upward toward the darkened sky! The scene is awful now ! Those sheets of flame Envelope roof and dome and spire, while clouds Of smoke ascend. — Oh, what could drown or tame Those deadly flames that rage beneath the shrouds Of bursting smoke! Behold! that splendid tower. Like some great martyr's sacred head, is bent Amid the withering flames ; and all the power Of that strong crest, now lost in dire destruction! A few hours do their work. And after all That fearful spectacle of fire and smoke, The only grandeur is the blackened wall; The faithful clock has stopped upon the stroke Of time for service. All the power and worth Of art seem but an ashy heap ere long- But planted deeply in the solid earth The great foundation still stands firm and strong. O faithful man, renew that house of light Whose walls are built upon the solid rock; Uprear its columns to their ancient height; Secure its altar from the tempest's shock; Its beams and rafters anchor sure and strong, Restore its grandeur to the olden state. And let the cadence of its sacred song Ascend high up to heaven's holy gate! Methinks I see that temple all renewed. And throngs have entered through the open door, And all its sacred windows seem imbued With holy light, that brightens more and more ! And then I see a wanderer come apart, And leave the world with all its gloom and night. Some holy book against his faithful heart. His face turned upward toward the higher Light! DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. ' 495, A child's soliloquy. I wonder who it is that knows just who or where old Santa is; and after Christ- mas where he goes with those reindeer of his. If I could see an Esquimau who lives up North where it is cold, I surely think that he would know, for Santa lives up there I'm told. He doesn't make a bit of stir, but always comes when I'm in bed; my mamma says he's dressed in fur, and papa says his nose is red. I thought 1 heard him at our door, or coming down our kitchen flue; and mamma saw him at the store, — I wonder who he is, don't you? If I'd sit up I might find out, but papa talks so much of him, and mamma's seen him too, no doubt, and so I think I'll just ask them. But all of the efforts of Decatur count}^ writers have not been directed toward poetic composition. Some have turned to prose and their product has attained more than a local circulation. One of the most notable prose works produced in the county is a volume on "The Reproach of Capital Punishment," by Hamilton Mercer, the editor of the Greenshurg Democrat. This was issued first in 19 14 and received very favorable comment from newspapers and magazines generally. This volume is a very effective weapon against all the arguments advanced in favor of capital punishment. Mr. Mercer has made a careful study of his subject, and his wide e.xperience as an editor has enabled him to see the subject from every side. Mr. Mercer begins his book by the discussion of the subject of vested authority, and from the very first sentence to the close he shows that he is a logician. He maintains that "governments derive their just powers from- the consent of the governed, and proceeds to show that if magistrates put men to death they are doing no better than an individual who murders." This is true because the power of the magistrates comes from the individual. In this first chapter Mr. Mercer shows his familiarity with Blackstone and other authorities in jurisprudence. In the discussion of "Moses and the Death Penalty," the author shows his splendid knowledge of the Bible. He proves that that law reriuiring death penalty originated when the recognized rule was "blood for blood." But if this be now carried out, "man is nearly two thousand years behind his Creator, who permitted the last blood offering to his name to be sacri- ficed on Calvary." If we hold the old Jewish law concerning the death penalty for murder, then we must hold it for the other crimes that were punishable by death under the law of Moses. Mr. Mercer shows very clearly that capital punishment is administered not for the reform of the criminal, or would-be criminals, but out of the 496 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. spirit of vengeance. This, of course, is contrary to the teachings of the Scripture which gives the requiring of vengeance to the Lord. This volume is concluded by some vital statistics showing that capital punishment does not reduce crime. Other writers of prose include \\"ill Cumback, Lewis A. Harding, Smiley Fowler, Orville Thomson and the various newspaper men of the county, all of whom have written some excellent articles on a wide variety of subjects. The Standard in 1910 had a resume of interesting historical facts gleaned from the early files of that paper. The A''czvs has a special correspondent, Noah Rogers, who has written many local historical articles for his paper. The Democrat and Review have also had special historical articles from time to time. Lewis A. Harding has issued one volume, "The Call of the Hour," which has elicited much favorable comment. The volume contains a variety of prose and poetry and shows the author in his best mood. Favorable reviews have been made of this work by such critics as the Indian- apolis News, the Kansas City Gazette Globe, the Pittsburg Gazette, the Cincin- nati Enquirer, the Topcka Daily Capital, the Boston Globe, Portland Orc- gonian, etc. Another work of 'Siv. Harding's is entitled "The Preliminary Diplomacy of the Spanish-American War," with an introduction by Dr. Amos S. Heiskey, instructor in political science and international law in Indiana University. In 191 5 was published Mr. Harding's "A Few Spoken Words," with an introduction by Prof. John M. Clapp, head of the department of English of Lake Forest College. H6 has written many articles for news- papers and magazines. The late Orville Thomson published a history of the Seventh Regiment of Indiana Volunteers, setting up the type and doing his own press work. This is remarkable in view of the fact that he was more than eighty years of age at the time. Smiley Fowler is a versatile writer, turning his hand with equal facility to either prose or poetry. Some of his short articles have been widely copied in the newspapers of the country. The addresses and lectures of the late Will Cumback have been gathered in a volume and have found a place in many of the best libraries of the nation. CHAPTER XXII. DECATUR COUNTY INDUSTRIES, PAST AND PRESENT. During pioneer days in the IMiddle West, when transportation facili- ties were Hmited and communities were more dependent upon their own resources, industrial enterprises of a county often outnumbered those of the present, since steam and electricity have been harnessed to bring in commodities from every quarter of the globe. Small mills and shops sprung up apace. There was grain to be ground, saddles and harness to be made, cloth to be manufactured and brick to be burned. Civilization had sup- planted the Indian, and the never-ceasing wheels of industry had received their impetus. In 1823 John House built the first saw-mill and water grist-mill just back of where South Park cemetery is located. House, besides operating these mills, earned a little extra money by gunsmithing and blacksmithing. His son, Isaac, operated the mill for about twenty-five years. The miller in this case took one-eighth of the grain for grinding it. This mill ground mostly corn, but some wheat was raised by the early settlers and taken there to be made into flour. William Ross built the first horse grist-mill in the same year, one-half mile north of McCoy's. In 1832 Elijah Mitchell built the first oil-mill. It was located one mile west of Greensburg. The following year he built the first steam saw- and grist-mill, on the lot just east of the Garland mills. The first water-power saw-mill was started by John Forsythe, two miles east of Greensburg, in 1824. Another industry in the same neighbor- hood was that operated by John Layton, who made fla.x brakes, plow woods, ox yokes and other articles. Layton also made rope and twine from the fiber of a variety of nettles which was very common at that time. The first water-mill in Sand Creek township was owned by Elijah Davis and the first horse-mill, by William Robbins. Robbins built one of the first water-mills located in Slabtown, si.x miles east of Greensburg. This mill, which is called Layton's mill, is still running, but steam is now used to operate it. (32) 498 ■ DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Ill 1836 or 1837 Edward Warthin introduced the first steam engine in Clay township. It was used to run a mill on Clifty creek, below Milford, and is supposed to have been the first steam-mill with a bolting apparatus in the county. However, the first millers of the township were the Critzers, who owned several mills on Clifty creek, one of which is still in use a few miles south of Milford. One of their later competitors was William W. Burton, who operated a horse-mill in the same neighborhood. The first mill in Marion township was owned by a man named Brush and was located on Sand creek. William Evans owned the first horse-mill in Jackson township. The first grist-mill in Clinton township was built by John and William Hamilton, two brothers, who had emigrated from Vir- ginia in 1822. This mill was placed on Clifty creek. All traces of it dis- appeared years ago. Some time later, William Buchanan built a corn cracker for Thomas Lanham, which stood on the south fork of Clifty creek. About the same time, the first saw-mill in the neighborhood was built by a man named Doug- lass, who was later killed in its machinery. At an early day, the Hamilton brothers changed one of their grist- mills into a bark-mill and used in to pulverize slippery elm, dogwood and sassafras bark for shipment to Eastern markets. One of the first grist-mills, carding machines and distilleries, combined, in Fugit township was oper- ated by William Henderson, who lived near what is now Springhill. Another mill was operated near Kingston by a man named Smith. The first tanyard in Fugit township was built by Lewis Lacker on the farm now owned by Everett Hamilton. In 1841 H. C. Cowles, of Mil- ford, was manufacturing fanning mills for cleaning wheat, rye and oats. These fans were capable of clearing three or four hundred bushels of grain in a day. Anthony Degant purchased the tanyard owned by Benjamin ]\Iartin, two miles from Millhousen, near the Ripley county line, in 1847. ^^ ^^^ learned the trade in Germany and operated the establishment on a toll basis, taking a certain per cent of hides tanned for his pay. Blacksmiths, in the early days, manufactured all plows and other farm implements used. The smiths made plows during the winter, when business was not very brisk, and sold them in the spring when farming activities started. There were two shops in Greensburg which were well known about the county. One was owned by Squires & Johnson and the other by John Roszell. One of the very early industries of Greensburg was a hat factory^ DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 499 which was located on East Washington street. This estabhshment was doing business as far back as 1825. In addition, there were, of course, the usual number of shoemakers, chairmakers and other workers in wood. A man from Cincinnati started an oil-mill, for the extraction of oil from flax seed, in 1840. Just a year or two later a Scotchman named Craig began the manufacture of coverlids on the site of the First Methodist church. James Connor started a wagon and buggy shop in 1850 on West Main street and managed it very successfully for a number of years. Seven years later a chair factory was located on the west side of the public square. Ezra Conner, in i860, began the manufacture of wagons of excellent design which had a wide demand. He sold them for one hundred and twenty-five dollars each. They were, of course, hand-made throughout. EARLY WOOLEN MILLS. Decatur county pioneers were very industrious people. While the men were clearing the forest and planting the crops, their wives and daughters found plenty to do in spinning, carding, fulling, dyeing and weaving the wool from the flock of sheep which each householder possessed. These processes were the only means by which the early settlers could obtain cloth, unless they had money with which to purchase it from some trader. After a time, small shops were set up and people pursued this sort of work as a trade, and gradually home spinning was abandoned. For a number of years, these industries flourished, and then larger establishments drove the smaller concerns out of existence. So completely has the industry been wiped out, that it is now a rare thing to see a carding machine or even a spinning wheel in Decatur county. John Thompson had a mill for carding wool one-half mile northwest of Greensburg, in 1844. Others who operated woolen mills at Greensburg were Peyton H. Barkley and John T. Hamilton. Hamilton had a shop where he carded wool, flax, linen and linsey. He also has a saddlery and harness shop. In 1844 Michael Gilman started a shop for carding, fulling and dyeing on the mouth of Mill creek, near St. Omer. He had two sets of carding machines and the other necessary equipment. His terms were plain wool, five cents a pound and mixed wool, seven and one-half cents a pound. He took wheat and other farm products in payment. Among the older woolen mills, was one at St. Paul, which was oper- ated by John D. Paul in connection with his saw-mill. The mill was pur- 500 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. chased, upon Paul's death in 1867, by Erastus Flo3'd, who had been in part- nership with him for a number of years. They were also jointly interested in a flour-mill at that place. Their woolen mill was equipped to handle the finest Merino and Sax- ony wool. They kept in stock a large amount of satinetts, blankets, cassi- meres, full cloths, jeans and yarns to be exchanged for wool. They charged three dollars and a half a pair for making blankets, sixty cents a yard for cloth and thirty-five cents a yard for white flannel. The mill burned in 1877. In 1845 William Shaner and Samuel Snyder rented the machinery owned by Michael Oilman, and commenced the manufacture of guaranteed products. They stood responsible for all cloth they made, providing the wool they received was first class. They had fixed cash prices, or, in case the customer desired, took one-seventh of the wool in exchange for their preparation of the remainder. The silk industr}' was once started in Decatur county, but never resulted in anything permanent. In 1842 W. B. Cobb cultivated four thousand mulberry trees for sale, to be used in cultivation of silk. He sold them at twenty dollars a thousand, which made them good investments for shade purposes, if nothing else. Millhousen also boasted of a woolen mill, which was destroyed by fire on May 30, 1874. This mill had been very active in its output, but com- petition had begun to tell on its business and, although the loss at that time was estimated at twenty thousand dollars, this was only about one-third of its actual cost. In 1852 Gageby and Siling ventured on the experiment of making furniture by machinery propelled by steam. This was the first real manu- facturing venture with modern-day equipment in Greensburg. In five years this enterprise had increased and was employing fifteen men, with an annual output of twenty thousand dollars. One of their orders at that time was for the fixtures in the Shelby county court house. Their building was a five-story structure and fifty by seventy-five feet. It was operated until the latter part of the eighties, when it was destroyed by fire and never replaced. In perusing the files of the Standard for 1874, it is found that the main industries which are listed and commented on in that paper are the marble works of J. «& J. Pool and the carriage works of Hazelrigg, Pool & Company. The history of these two manufactories are written up in full, but whether these were all that Greensburg boasted of at this time or whether these were the only ones which made it worth the editor's while to visit and comment on, is not for us to say. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 5OI GREELEY LIMESTONE COMPANY, AT ST. PAUL. Limestone quarries of the Greeley Stone Company at St. Paul are the most extensive in the county that are operated by local capital. Operations of the plant cover a space of si.xteen acres, three and one-half of which have already been excavated to a depth of thirty feet. It is planned to carry the work to a point fourteen feet lower before the end of the year. The company owns a modern plant, built in 1908. It was a powerful crusher, the largest known, capable of handling seven and one-half tons of fifteen-inch stone at a time. The mill will produce fifteen carloads of crushed stone a day. Power is supplied by a one hundred and fifty-horse-power engine, driven by steam from a two hundred and fifty-horse-power boiler. Drills are steam driven and the engine pulls cars from the quarry, by means of an endless chain, to the crusher. A valuable by-product of the plant is pulverized limestone, which makes a valuable fertilizer and is readily sold to farmers wishing to correct the acidity of their soil. About a carload of this limestone dust is produced each day the plant is operated. Chemical analysis shows that this dust is ninety- four per cent, calcium carbide and magnesium. Twenty-five men are regularly employed at the plant, which is situated in a picturesque location upon the banks of Flat Rock. Cincinnati and a number of Indiana cities are regular customers of the company, taking about one thousand two hundred carloads of crushed stone a year for street con- struction and repair. The company is capitalized for fifteen thousand dollars. Its oflficers are R. E. Greeley, president and general manager ; Albert Greeley, vice-president, and Clarence Greeley, secretary and treasurer, .\lbert Greeley is the father of the other two members of the company and is a prominent lumber man of Muncie, Indiana. CONTRACTORS. The most extensive constructive business in the county is that of the firm of Pulse & Porter, Greensburg, general contractors. In December, 1887, Alex Porter and Will Pulse formed a partnership and bought the plan- ing-mill and lumber yard on West ?\Iain street that had been operated by Edward and Charles A. Porter. At the same time they started in the gen- eral contracting business. Their first ventures were successful and they enlarged their field of operations. Since the firm was organized it has had 502 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. a hand in the construction of some of the largest and best known institutions and plants in the state of Indiana. Two of the first contracts taken by this firm were for the construction of Science hall and the Hendricks library at Hanover College. The next was Science hall, at Indiana University, a one-hundred-thousand-dollar contract. This firm later secured the contract and erected the buildings for the South- eastern Hospital at Madison, a contract amounting to more than a million and a half of dollars. Other well-known buildings which have been built by Pulse & Porter are the Gentry hotel, Bloomington, $35,000; the Union Traction Company's powder house at Anderson, $200,000 ; the Maxwell-Briscoe plant. New Castle, $225,000; Odd Fellows Home, Greensburg, $100,000, and the factory of the Bromwell Brush and Wire Company, Greensburg, $30,000. The sanitary sewer system of Greensburg was laid by this firm. It is nineteen miles in length and cost the city thirty thousand dollars. Since completing this contract it has built power hovises at Winona and New Castle, erected the Odd Fellows' hall at Greensburg and the Greensburg and Osgood school buildings, both of which are considered models of their kind. At various times the firm has given employment to more than five hundred men. All kinds of mill work is done at the planing-mill in West Main street. Wood is sawed out for interior finishing, sash and doors and every con- ceivable purpose. The first contract ever taken by this firm was the erection of the Greensburg Baptist church in 1888. The building is still used as a church. MEEK ICE COMPANY. The first artificial ice plant in Greensburg was established by John E, Robbins, on West Railroad street. He conducted the plant for several yearsj and then disposed of it to the Meek Ice Company in 1912. The plant has a daily capacity of forty tons and employs twelve men in the factory and orii the delivery wagons. They not only supply the city of Greensburg, but have; built up a large trade with the smaller towns of the county as well. The delivery outside of the city is done with an automobile truck. BROMWELL BRUSH AND WIRE WORKS. The Bromwell Brush and Wire Works of Greensburg was established in 1903 as a branch of the Cincinnati firm of the same name. The company is incorporated under the laws of Ohio. In the branch at Greensburg only DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 5O3 wire cloth for window screens is manufactured. During the year 1914 six- teen miUion square feet of screening was made in the local factory. The seventy employees of the plant are paid a total of three thousand dollars a month. The local manager is E. M. Beck. THE GARLAND MILLING COMPANY. Foreign as well as domestic demand is supplied by the Garland Milling Company, whose flour-mill ranks eighth in capacity among Indiana mills. This company sells all over the Southeast and through the New England states and has a growing market in the British isles, Norway and Holland. The company was organized and incorporated in 1898 by R. P. Moore, of Princeton, Indiana. Its original capital stock was thirty thousand dollars. An old mill built by John Emmert in 1869 was purchased and business was started on a modest scale. Since then the plant has been greatly enlarged. It now has an elevator, with a capacity of one hundred thousand bushels, a cooper shop, which turns out thirty thousand barrels a year, and a flour-mill with a daily capacity of one hundred and fifty barrels. Twenty-five men are employed in the mill and five in the cooper shop. The mill is equipped with the best of modern machinery and its product has found favor wherever it has come into use. In 1909, in order to care for increased business, the company was reorganized and the capital stock increased to fifty thousand dollars. The present officers of the company are: John F. Russell, president; G. D. Ayres, vice-president, and George P. Shoemaker, secretary-treasurer. Wheat is purchased in the open market and is brought to Greensburg from all parts of the county. On account of the excellent shipping facilities, distribution is readily secured, and the flour can be shipped to the eastern seaboard by three dift'erent routes. CHAPTER XXIII. SIDELIGHTS ON DECATUR COUNTY HISTORY. DECATUR COUNTY THE SCENE OF THE HOOSIER SCHOOLMASTER. There have been several stories and novels written whose scenes are laid in Indiana, but it is safe to say that no one novel of Indiana life has created such a universal interest as "The Hoosier Schoolmaster," published by Edward Eggleston in 1871. There has been much controversy as to where the scene of the novel was laid, and every county in Indiana through which flows a cliffy creek has persisted in claiming to be the scene of the novel. Before his death in 1902, Mr. Eggleston was questioned concerning the location of the plot and he replied without hesitation that Decatur county furnished the background and that the territory immediately sur- rounding Clifty in Clay township was the one and only place where the scene could have been laid. Moreover, several characters in the novel were taken from well-known people who lived in or near Clifty. It should be mentioned that Eggleston came with his widowed mother to live in Clifty, Decatur county, when he was nine years old. Born at Vevay, Indiana, December 10, 1839, he had lived there until his father's death and had then gone with his mother to Decatur county, where she had several relatives, among them tiie Lowrey, Craig and Welsh families. Two years later (1850) Mrs. Eggleston became the wife of Rev. Williamson Terrell, a noted Methodist minister of southern Indiana. In this commun- ity in Clay township, Decatur county, young Eggleston grew to manhood, and in the same township lie taught his first term of school. The location of this school house is still pointed out to tourists who make annual pil- grimages to this county to> visit the scene of the "Hoosier Schoolmaster." Eggleston learned to intimately know the people whom he later incorporated in his novel and there can be no question of the identity of many of his characters with persons who actually lived in Clay township in the middle of the last century. This section was then populated with an uncouth, un- cultured and, in many cases, a lawless band of people. Bands of robbers and highwaymen were known to exist in this part of the county and it is EDWAKD EGGLESTON HOME AT MILFORD. I'ASCIIAL T. LAMr.EKT CAISIX. lU'ILT IX 1S02. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 50^ an actual rubbery, noted in the records of Decatur county, which furnished Eggleston with the background of his story. The framework of the "Hoosier Schoohnaster" was taken from a rubbery committed on Caleb Stark, who figures in the novel as "Jack Means," and on anuther man, a German, who in real life was John Dronberger. In the novel the Dutchman appears as "Schroeder." However, in order to bring both robberies into the novel in the form of one, the author combined the incidents of both robberies into a robbery committed on the Dutchman, Schroeder. The brains of the trio of robliers was Dr. Henry B. Smalley,. a physician, who appears in the novel as Doctor Small. His compatriots in crime were \\'alter Johnson, a student in his ofiice, who is the "Greenwood Harrison" of the novel, and David Ricketts, the "Pete Jones" of the story. Doctor Smalley li\-ed aljout two miles S(.)Uth of Adams on Caleb' Stark's farm in a house which stood near the present residence of 01i\'er Deem, while Caleb Stark lived opposite him across the road. Stark, "Jack Means," who appears so prominently in the story, was no less prominent in the early history of Decatur county, as a successful farmer, than as a strong supporter uf schools. He was one of the three men who supervised the erection of the present court house and to this day may be seen the name "Caleb Stark" carved on a stone slab above the west entrance of the court house. He owned a large farm on which he had several tenants. His wife, .-Vnna Boone, was a cousin of the faifxjus old frontiersman, Daniel Boone. One of his sons, Willet Stark, later flattered himself that he was "Bud Means," but Eggleston wrote at one time that Bud Means never existed in any one person, but that his traits were taken from several of the young men whom he knew around Cliffy. The actual incidents of the real robbery in Clay township were as fol- low : Doctor Smalley in some way had learned that Stark had a large sum of money concealed in his house. Accordingly he laid plans whereby he hoped to rob the honest old farmer of some of his hard-earned posses- sions. With this idea in view, the crafty doctor went to Stark to borrow a bunch of keys, one of which, so he told Stark, would open his (Smalley's) trunk, the key to which he pretended he had lost. Up to this time Smalley had borne an unblemished reputation and there was no one who thought he had any connection with the band of robbers who had been operating in the vicinity. Smalley secured the keys from Stark without any diffi- culty, returned them in a short time, but while he had them in his possession he took an impression of one which unlocked a certain door of Stark's house. With a key made from this impression, Smalley was now able to 506 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. gain entrance to Stark's house and at once planned to execute the roljbery. He and his two partners in crime, Harrison ("Johnson") and Ricketts ("Pete Jones" ) decided upon the night when the robbery should take place. On the appointed night Harrison held the horses a short distance from the house and Smalley remained in the yard, while Ricketts went into the house and got the money without disturljing anyone in the family. Once on the outside the men had no difficulty in getting away and at once left the com- munity. The robbery was discovered the next day and Col. Merritt C. Welsh, the constable and the keeper of a store in Cliffy, was sent in search of the robbers. By shrewd detective work he tracked the robbers over sev- eral states and, after about three months, he captured them. However, in his search for evidence against the men, Colonel Welsh broke into a trunk belonging to Smalley and Harrison without the proper warrant. Smalley immediately filed suit against him in the Bartholomew circuit court and the Colonel was fined one cent, while the costs were thrown on the plaintiff. The doctor and Ricketts were let out on bail until the trial could be held before a justice of the peace in Milford. Before the case came to trial, however, Harrison confessed and turned state's evidence against his 'fellow conspirators. Harrison was kept under guard at Stark's house pending the trial and during this time was allowed to go around the farm under guard. He slept in a room in an upper story and it seems that this part of the house was the only part that had an upper story. The rest of the house, one story high, consisted of two wings ex- tending out on either side from this central portion, which stood like a turret above the rest of the building. A day or two before the trial Harri- son jumped out one night and made his way along the roof to the edge of the building and thus escaped. He left the county that night and no one in the county has ever heard of him since that night. The case came to trial at Milford on the appointed day, but there was not sufficient evidence given to convict the robbers, and the case was dis- missed. Smalley then filed suit against Stark for false imprisonment, but nothing could Ije proved, so the case was dropped. Apropos of this case, the following document, taken from the Decatur county records, is very interesting: "In vacation : State of Indiana, "Decatur County. "We, Henry Smalley, Reuben R. Cobb, James Morgan, Payton H. Barclav and Robert Smith, owe the state of Indiana two thousand dollars DECATUR COUNTYj INDIANA. 507 to be levied on our propert)-. The condition of the above bond is that the said Henry B. Smalley shall personally be before the Decatur circuit court on the first day of next term, there to answer to a charge of receiving and concealing stolen property, and abide the order of the court, and not to depart thence without leave. Then this recognizance to be void; else to remain in full force. "Henry B. Smalley. "Reuben R. Cobb. "James Morgan. "Peyton H. Barclay. "Robert Smith. "Taken and approved before me this 29th day of August, 1853. "John Imlay, Sherifif." In the records of the circuit court at Greensburg is found a similar bond for Greenwood Harrison, filed August 30, 1853, signed by Greenwood Harrison, M. C. Welsh, William Armington, Willet H. Stark, Elijah Mark- land, John Dronberger, J. O. A. Garrison, Thomas Harwood, James Cory and Robert Smith. Enough has been said to settle forever the question as to the location of the scene of the "Hoosier Schoolmaster." Many places in the story can be found from the descriptions given by the author and old residents of the little village of Cliffy (Milford) point out with pardonable pride where Eggleston lived in the town. The novel created a distinct impression when it came out in the fall of 1871 and to this da)' it finds a ready sale among the reading public. It has been translated into French, German and Danish and received with popular favor in all those countries. Cliffy enjoys the unique distinction of being the only village of Indiana whose beauties and early incidents may be read in four languages. Eggleston has immortalized a period in Indiana life and given it such a flavor that the lives of the people of that period, their manners and customs, will be preserved for all genera- tions to come. DECATUR COUNTY TAX P.^YERS IN 1 862. It will be interesting to the people of Decatur county in 1915 to note the list of ta.xpayers of 1862, who paid more than one hundred dollars in taxes. The complete list follows : Greensburg — David Lovett, $356.36; Judge Davidson, $305.00; Greensburg Bank, $268.52; J. S. Scobey, $232.39; D. and J. Stewart, 5o8 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. $189.05: Ezra Lathrop, $185.43; A. R. Forsythe. $178.70; J. P. Hittle, $157.85; G. Woodfill, $155.81; E. and L. P. Lathrop, $132.50; H. H. Tal- bott, $150.79; Smith & AIcDougle, $146.40; W. S. Woodfill, $127.49. Washington Township — George W. Sidener, $286.72; R. M. Hamilton, $264.87; J. E. Hamilton, $238.15; Xath Patton. $220.84; J- B. Foley, $209.45; J. E. Robbins, $209.31; T. AI. White, $205.91; .\dam R. INleek, $191.26; T. M. Hamilton, $177.64; M. D. Ross, $170.92: R. A. Hamilton, $170.16. Fugit Township — Luther A. Donnell, $205.50; Samuel A. Donnell, $176.40; John Kincaid, $142.81; John C. Donnell, $131.39; Thomas ]\Ieek, $124.95; John Carroll, $124.50. Clinton Township — William Sefton, $292.68; George McLaughlin, $239.85; Warder Hamilton, $216.75; Jacob Sandusky, $191.48; T. G. Hamilton, $156.16; John Meek, $143.25; Nathan Swails, $135.54. Adams Township — Manly Kimble, $183.26; Joseph D. Pleak, $166.84; \\'. J. Robinson, $131.92; Charles Miller, $131.82; Hiram Jewett, $128.52; David Jewett, $126.78. Clay Township — Richard Williams, $182.31; J. J. Pavey, $172.90; Walter Braden, $154.99; Caleb Stark, $123.95; Thomas C. Miers, $123.23; S. M. Edward, $122.76. Jackson Township — R. and D. Gibson, $117.10. Sand Creek Township — Robert Armstrong, $130.33. Marion Township — Charles Hazelrigg, $151.61; B. Hardebeck, $100.20. POPULATION STATISTICS OF DECATUR COUNTY. I9IO Adams township 1.851 Clay township, including Milford town 1.508 Milford town 169 Clinton township 641 Fugit township 1.328 Jackson township, including Forest Hill town_ 1,369 Forest Hill town iii Marion township, including Millhousen town 1,670 Millhousen town 211 Salt Creek township, including Newpoint town 1,228 Newpoint town 341 1900 1890 1.867 1,942 1.503 1,681 211 231 641 699 1.538 1.605 1.477 1,562 152 124 .794 2,030 265 224 1.532 1.733 451 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 5O9 Sand Creek township, including Westi>ort town 2,370 2,562 2,499 Westport town 675 614 452 •Washington township, inchiding Greensburg city 6,828 6,604 5.518 Greensbnrg city 5420 5.034 3.596 Total 18,793 19,518 19,277 THE TEMPERANCE MOVEMENT IN DECATUR COUNTY. A perusal of newspaper and contemporary documents discloses the fact that the temperance question has l)een before the county from almost the date of its organization. It is to be remembered that our American pioneers counted whiskey as ®ne of the necessities of life and such orders here given from the commissioners' records were of daily occurrence and caused no comment: "May term, 1823. Ordered by the iDoard that the count}^ agent give Thomas Hendricks a credit for the sum of two dollars being a part of an order made him for thirty dollars, forty and a fourth cents for his services in surveying the town of Greensburgh and for Whiskey furnished the Agent on the day of the sale of lots. * * * Received of Samuel Huston, Agent for the county of Decatur, ninety-three and three-fourths cents for one gallon and a half of whiskey got for the use of said county, August 14, 1823. Sam T. Cross * * * Silas Stewart, Agent Decatur county, Cr. : To amount paid for crying ofi the carpenter work of the court house, 35 cents ; for whiskey 37J/2 cents." Probably the first of the temperance advocates of the county was Levi Wooden, who, according to well-authenticated traditions, was the first in Clay township, and perhaps the Cdunt}'. to refuse to ser\'e whiskey at a log rolling. The early nation-wide temperance agitation, known as the Washing- tonian movement, hit Decatur county in 1840 and, from the point of \iew of numliers, was undoubtedly the strongest of the early temperance societies. More than two hundred men joined this society and took the jilcdge of total abstinence, but, five years later, less than half a dozen had held fast to the oath and the organization died in Greensbnrg. The \\^ashingtonians had organizations in other parts of the county also and the society at St. Omer continued for many years. This society held a large rally in 1845, ^t which Joseph Robinson, Thomas Hendricks, I. T. Gibson, the Re\-. J. Presley, ^V. F. Ferguson and j. Cable, made stirring addresses on the evils of strong 5IO DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. drink. The climax of the Washingtonian agitation was reached when the county board of commissioners, on December 4, 1843, as a result of tli/e numerous petitions, refused to grant any liquor licenses for a period of five years. Decatur county first voted on the liquor question in 1847. At that time the license fee was one hundred dollars and was known as a grocery license fee. The "wets" won in six townships, Washington and Fugit townships voting dry. The vote was as follows : Wet. Dry. Washington township 154 304 Fugit township 72 153 Clinton township 71 36 Adams township 175 59 Clay township 140 94 Jackson township 35 16 Sandcreek township loi 33 Marion township , ^^7 ^;^ Total 835 868 About this same time the township in which Columbus, Indiana, is located voted "wet" by a majority of twenty-six, while the majority at Brook- ville, Indiana, was thirty-six. The relative standing of the "wets" and "drys" did not change at Greensburg during the next sixty years. In 1858, Carrie D. Filkins, a well-known temperance lecturer of the day. spoke in Greensburg on" the evils of the liquor traffic. She advocated, among other things, that the sale of intoxicants be placed exclusively in the hands of women and that a law be passed making it illegal to sell alcoholic liquors for beverage purposes. As a result of her visit, the Ark of Safety was organized. The Greensburg Standard of the following week comment- ing upon the situation says, "There are at the present time no less than ten whiskey shops in the moral, as some folks term it, town of Greensburg. In the southern part of town, known as Ireland, we are told that almost every house has within its walls a barrel of whiskey. What is our beautiful village coming to?" The temperance wave again struck Greensljurg in June, 1877, when a number of meetings were held in Alumni hall. The Red Ribbon Club was organized and gave a social in the city hall. On June 15, several inveterate drinkers signed the pledge and organized a "Dare-to-do-Right" club. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 5 II FIRST LOCAL OPTION ELECTION IN DECATLTR COUNTY. The first local option election in Decatur county was held on January 26, 1909, and resulted in a "dry" majority of 1,679. ^'^s will be seen from the appended table, eight of the nine townships voted to abolish the saloon, Marion township alone returning a "wet" majority of 63. There is no way to tell exactly how the city of Greensburg voted, as its vote was included in Washington township, but it was estimated at the time that there were four hundred votes outside the city. It is fair to presume that the country vote was not materially different from the city vote and on this basis the city vote was 1,035 foi" ^^'^^ "drys'' and 513 for the "wets." The entire county, except a small strip in the southeastern part, voted by more than two to one to- eliminate the saloon. The vote by townships was as follows : Dry. Wet. Maj. Washington ^y~37 611 626 Fugit 239 105 134 Clinton 106 33 yT, Adams 339 150 189 Clay 274 103 171 Jackson 259 88 171 Sand Creek 480 115 365 Salt Creek 160 148 13 Marion 178 241 Totals 3,273 1,594 1,741 The city of Greensburg voted "wet" by 137 majority in 191 1 and three years later voted "dry" by a majority of 80. Millhousen and Newpoint are the only towns in the county now (1915) having saloons. There are two saloons in St. Paul on the Shelby county side of the town. THE woman's CHRISTIAN TEMPERANCE UNION. The Greensburg Woman's Christian Temperance Union was organized on December 9, 1883, by Mrs. M. L. Wells, of Greencastle, who was at that time president of the state organization. Mrs. Dr. Johnson was chosen presi- dent of the local group, with Mrs. L. S. Meal as- corresponding secretary, Mrs. Anna Thomson as recording secretary and Mrs. Charles Kemble as treasurer. Mrs. Thomson resigned as recording secretary and Mrs. Larrie Lathrop was- 512 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. elected. Vice-presidents were appointed from the following churches : ]\Irs. Louise M. Thomson, from the Presbyterian : Mrs. Johnston, from the Baptist ; Miss Spreaker. from the Centenary ^^lethodist Episcopal ; Mrs. Birdsell, from the Christian : Mrs. Dr. Bracken, from the First Methodist Episcopal, and Mrs. Thurman, from the African Methodist Episcopal. The first meeting was held in the First Methodist church on December 12, 1883. with twelve members present. At this time all the meetings were held in the various churches. At this first meeting, following devotional exer- cises — which, as always afterward, came first on the program — it was proposed to take up some of the different departments of work and, later, superintend- ents were appointed. Airs. Charles Kemble and IMrs. Ben Swem were appointed superintendents of jail and prison work and Mrs. Louise j\L Thom- son was made evangelistic and gospel superintendent. Other departments were added at various intervals. During the first year, meetings were held weekly. During this year a reading room was opened, a mission school started, under the super\-ision of Mesdames Bonner and St3'ers, a dining hall managed and public lectures and sermons arranged for. For the latter, the opera house was secured. At the meeting of December 26, 1883, in the Presbyterian church, in Greensburg, the devotional exercises were a period of spiritual interest and profit to all. In November, 1885, after two prosperous years, the list of members included the following: Mesdames Johnston, Kemble, Wheatley, Thomson, Copper, Flittle, Styers, Doctor Johnson, Colonel Scobey, Collet, Drake, Wooden, Pool, B. D. Swem, Gavin, S. A. Bonner, Laura M. Thomson, L. S. Meal and the Misses Isabella Hamilton, Stalla Hamilton. Smiley, Davidson, Falconljury and Henika. The fourth district convention met at the First Methodist Episcopal church, Alarch 27 and 28, 1884, with the state secretary presiding in the absence of the state president. Mrs. Louise M. Thomson was chosen district president, with Mrs. Chester Hamilton as secretary and Miss Lizzie Lathrop as treasurer. .\ short time afterward the old district organization was dropped and each county was organized. The present county officers are : Mary Gray, of Greensburg, president ; Mrs. Emma D. Shaffer, of Westport, secretary, and Mrs. Eva Stephenson, of Greensburg, treasurer. At the present time the roll contains the names of one hundred and eight of the most prominent women of Greensliurg. and the names of fourteen men who are honorary members. There are now twehe departments, each with its superintendent. Regular meetings are held on the second and fourth Tuesdays of each month, with special meetings occasionally. For the year IIOX. Wll.I, (T.MIIAI K. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 513 1915 an excellent program was prepared containing the declaration of prin- ciples, list of members and the program of each meeting. The officers and superintendents of departments for the present year (191 5) are: President, Versie B. Owens; vice-president, Ella Adams; recording secretary, Rosalie Kercheval; corresponding secretary, Josephine Moody ; treasurer, Nannie Gray. Superintendents of departments : Flower mission, Etta Woods, Lessie Gray ; mothers' meetings, Josephine Moody, Arlie Gray; scientific temperance, Laura M. Thomson, Carrie Clark; medical tem- perance, Minerva Galbraith; Sunday school work, Emily Brown; press, Ella Adams; temperance literature, Julia Montgomery; Sabbath observance, Sarah Hunter; franchise, Ella F. Smith, Ella McKay; medal contest, Louisa Cory, Anna Kennedy ; evangelistic and visiting committee, Mary Gray, Mary Eward, Elizabeth Bennett ; music, Hattie Morrison, Ethel Watson, Esther Wood. DECATUR COUNTY PEOPLE WHO HAVE RISEN TO DISTINCTION. Every count}' in the state of Indiana has produced a few people who have gained reputations for themselves which have extended beyond the limits of their own county, and Decatur county is no exception. In this brief sum- mary of notable persons from this county, only those are given who are not mentioned elsewhere in this volume. The county is'proud to honor such men as Congressmen Cumback and Foley, men who have probably carried the name and fame of Decatur county farther than any other man. As an orator, as a scholar, as a lyceum lecturer, as a statesman and as a public-spirited man of affairs, it is not too much to say that Will Cumback was the county's most distinguished citizen. Foley's claim to inclusion among the leaders in his county lies in his service to the state while a member of Congress, and his subsequent career as a successful lawyer. Two men from the county have been in the consular service of the United States, Richard H. Belt and John Goodnow. Belt was born in Balti- more and was a merchant at \Vestport when he was appointed consul by President Tyler in 1843. He was stationed at Matamoras, Mexico, but died there a year later of the yellow fever. He came to Decatur county from his native city in company with his brother, Thomas. There are no descendants of the family now living in the coimty. John Goodnow was born in Greens- burg in 1856, the same year his father moved here from Vernon, Indiana, to open a flour-mill. He was appointed consul to Shanghai, China, by President McKinley in 1897. (33) 514 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Hon. Robert W. Miers was born in Clay township in 1845, graduated from Indiana University, was prosecntor and circuit judge at Blooming- ton and was elected to Congress on the Democratic ticket three times. He is now judge of the Monroe-Owen circuit court. B. F. Clayton, born in Adams township about 1840, moved to Iowa forty years ago after having served as county commissioner here. He was elected to the Iowa Legislature and was later president of the National Farmers' Congress. He is now a prominent banker at Indianola, Iowa. Lycurgus McCoy, born near Greensburg in 1835, mo\-ed to Iowa in 1855. He was a captain in the Thirty-third Iowa Regiment in the Civil War. Later he was elected county treasurer at Sigourney, Iowa. He became a Seventh-Day Adventist minister and moved to Battle Creek, Mich- igan, thirty years ago to become secretary of the sanitarium there. He is now chaplain of that institution. Alvin I. Hobbs, born in Greensburg in 1835, became a minister in the Christian church, filling prominent pastorates in Cincinnati, Louisville and Indianapolis. He was president of Drake University at Des Moines, Iowa, in the seventies. He held a public debate with a Universalist preacher at Des Moines and the same was later published in book form. John A. Donnell, born near Kingston in 1838, located in Iowa in 1855 and twenty years later went to Los Angeles, California, where he was elected prosecutor and became a prominent attorney for many years prior to his death in 191 3. Edmon Hez Swem, born in Greensburg in 1858, was educatetl at DePauw University and became a Presbyterian minister in 1882. In 1886 he changed his affiliation to the Baptist church. He was pastor of the Ninth Street Baptist church in Washington, D. C, for twenty-five years, and is still preaching in that city. Elias R. Monfort, son of Rev. J. G. Monfort, was born in Greensburg in 1840. He served in an Ohio regiment in the Civil War with the rank of captain. He was department commander of the Grand Army of the Repub- lic; was prosecuting attorney here in 1871 to 1873, and ser\-ed as postmaster at Cincinnati, from 1899 to 191 5. William H. Carroll, born in Greensburg in 1842, served in Wilder's battery. He was a candidate for sheriff on the Democratic ticket in 1866. He moved to ^Marion in 1870, served as circuit judge there, and is still practicing law at that place. Dr. Lora M. Henry, born near Springhill in 1856, graduated from DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 515 Monmouth United Presbyterian College, studied medicine and became a medical missionary at Assiut, Egypt, where he has been for fifteen years. Piatt Wicks, born in Greensburg about 1837, served as prosecutor just before the Civil War and was a prominent attorney during the sixties. He later moved to Harlan, Iowa, where he was elected to the Legislature. Still later he moved to Pueblo, Colorado, where he was a prominent barrister up to the time of his death, about ten years ago. Jacob G. Collicott, bom in Salt Creek township in 1874, graduated from the State University in 1896. He was principal of the high school at Elwood and Evansville and city superintendent at Tacoma, Washington, before becoming superintendent of the city schools of Indianapolis three years ago. Floy Gilmore was born in Greensburg in 1877 and graduated from the local high school in 1895. She graduated from the University of Michigan in 1899 with the degree of Bachelor of Law. She was assistant attorney- general of the Philippines, 1901-03; later she took a post-graduate course at Columbia University and was appointed professor of economics at Welles- ley College in 19 13. Wilbur W. Woodford, artist, died at Lawrenceburg, March 19, 1882. He was born at St. Omer, January 8, 1851, and followed his father, Capt. Charles Woodward, as fifer in Company A, One Hundred and Twenty- third Indiana Regiment, when a lad of twelve years. His father was elected sheriff in 1866, and the family moved here from St. Paul. Wilbur showed marked art talent while in our city schools, and in 1870 began a study of art in the School of Design in Cincinnati. When he died he was a profes- sor in that school. He spent two years in Paris and won many honors there. He was buried at Spring Grove cemetery, in Cincinnati, a proces- sion of students escorting his body to the tomb, where ex-Governor Noyes, former minister to France, spoke feelingly of his acquaintance and friend- ship for his deceased friend. THE ODD fellows' HOME. Greensburg is justly proud of the beautiful state Odd Fellows' Home which adjoins the city on the east. The cardinal principles of Odd Fellow- ship are friendship, love and truth, and it is due to the practical working of these three virtues that the Odd Fellows of Indiana erected this beautiful home fifteen years ago. It was the generous impulses of this great frater- nity in Indiana which made possible a home which seeks to provide the 5l6 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. proper care for all its unfortunate members. Here may be found a com- fortable home for the brothers and sisters on whom time has laid heavy hands and to whom good fortune has passed by on the other side. Here prattling childhood, robbed of kindly home and parents, finds its nearest substitute. The first building was dedicated on May i6, 1900, and a second build- ing on May 17, 1905. These two buildings have a total capacity of two hundred and fifty, while the hospital will accommodate twenty-eight more. The grounds comprise one hundred and thirty-five acres of beautiful roll- ing ground. This land was the gift of Decatur Lodge No. 103 and the citi- zens of Greensburg and vicinity. At the time the grand lodge was looking for a location for the home, many cities in the state offered sites, but the present location has shown the wisdom of the final choice. The farm and buildings are now valued at three hundred thousand dollars. The institution, which is incorporated as the Odd Fellows' Home Asso- ciation of Indiana, is maintained by a direct per capita tax of thirty-two cents on each subordinate, fifteen cents on each Rebekah and ten cents on each encampment membership, respectively. The total receipts in 1914 were about thirty-eight thousand dollars from these sources. The operating expenses of the institutipn, including administration and maintenance, were twenty-nine thousand one hundred and forty-one dollars and forty-two cents, an average per capita cost per meal of eighteen cents. Since the home was opened in 1900, five hundred and eighty-nine guests have been cared for. In June, 191 5, there were one hundred and fifty in the home, as follows: Men, sixty-nine; women, forty; boys, thirty- two; girls, nine. The ages of the guests range from two to ninety-two years. Since the home was opened in 1900 two hundred and fifty-four children have been received and one hundred and ten of this number have later been returned to their parents. Ninety-three children have been placed in good homes in various parts of the state. A striking evidence of the care of these children is shown by the fact that not a single child has ever died in the home. During the past year ten adults died, four children have been placed in homes and nine other children returned to their parents. The home is managed by a board of three directors — one selected by the grand lodge, one by the grand encampment and one by the Rebekah assembly. This board serves for a term of three years. The vice-presi- dent of the assembly is ex-officio president of the board of directors. The present directors are as follows: Florence McGregor, president ex-officio; TlIK (II. II SF.MINAKV. ( ; UKIvXSI'.rKC. RAILROAD YAUDS. GKEENSBlTltG. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 517 W. H. Bradshaw, vice-president; Mrs. Kate E. Barnett, secretary; VV. E. Longley, treasurer. The present superintendent of the Home is Charles E. Lockhart and his wife serves as his assistant. As the result of agitation which had its inception in an address before the Rebekah assemljly by Charles E. Lockhart, superintendent of the home, soon after he assumed charge, the graves of twenty Odd Fellows in South Park cemetery are now honored by a massive handsome monument. This monument is a gift to the home from the lodges of the state, which contrib- uted fifteen hundred dollars for its erection. The monument is seven feet four inches by four feet six inches at the base and stands six feet and two inches in height. It is of Barre granite, hammer finished and has the gen- eral style of a sarcophagus. The monument was dedicated on May 19, 1915. On that day fourteen hundred and thirteen members of the grand lodge and Rebekah assembly went by two special trains from Indianapolis, where they were in session, to participate in the dedicatory services and attend the unveiling of the monument. Addresses were made by \V. H. Leedy, Charles Warren Fairbanks, Ella M. Clark and Mary A. Poths. THE OLD SEMINARY. During the seventies and eighties James G. May wrote a series of articles for the local papers on the old seminary, an institution of which he was the head for several years. He speaks of whipping six boys on October 26, 1836, and three of them were sons of preachers. The boys were from twelve to fourteen years of age and had been guilty of defacing some of the outbuildings of the seminary at night. The old professor says his pupils did good work for him "in spite of these little diversions." In August, 1836, fourteen of his pupils signed a challenge which read: "We challenge at the close of the session the most rigid examination in all our studies," and laid it on his desk. It was signed by Cynthia Ann Free- man, Margaret Jane Bryan, Eliza Jane Ewing, George G. M. Craig, Saph- ronia Hazelrigg, Magdalene Uttinger, Camilla A. Thomson, Eliza A. Han- way, Orville L. Thomson, Tabitha O'N. Craig, Tamson Church, Mary E. Reilley, Mary Kendall, John H. Sanders. When the last day came the school trustees and parents were present. A lawyer and a minister proceeded to examine the class and found them equal to their profession. When it came to examining them on six books of Caesar the lawyer explained that he was "kind o' rusty" on the classics, and told them to examine themselves. One of the class took charge and, 5l8 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. of course, was easy on the others. During the 1836 term there were one hundred and thirty- four pupils enrolled. A RELIGIOUS REVIVAL. Probably the greatest religious revival ever held in Greensburg and throughout the county occurred during the winter of 1869-70. The Stand- ard, in its issue of March 10, 1870, says: "The spirit of revival continues in the churches throughout the county up to this date. More than one thou- sand have come to Christ and united with some division of our Lord's army. In this city the number added to the churches, as far as we have ascertained, is as follows: First Methodist, R. M. Barnes, pastor, 137; Centenary Meth- odist, G. L. Curtis, pastor, 82; Third Methodist, J. Tarkington, pastor, 6; Presbyterian, J. C. Irwin, pastor, 90; Christian, D. R. Van Buskirk, pastor, 70; Baptist, J. Green, pastor, 8; total, 393." A BAND TOURNAMENT. A band tournament was held in Greensburg, November i, 1882, when a crowd, estimated at from ten to twelve thousand, was present. Eight bands competed for prizes : Jonesboro, Seymour, Lawrenceburg, Franklin, Rushville, Thorntown, Milton and Aurora. The judges were Roll Adams, of Greensburg; James A. Nunn, of New Castle, and F. N. Myers, of Indi- anapolis. The first prize of one hundred and twenty-five dollars went to Franklin; the second, seventy-five dollars, to Thorntown, the third, fifty dollars, to Milton; the fourth, twenty-five dollars, to Lawrenceburg. It seems, from the account in a local paper of that week, that various kinds of running races were held on this day. John B. Kuhns, of Irvington, won a ten-dollar prize in a running race and Fred Boyle won five dollars as second. In a walking match for men over seventy, Joseph Patterson, of Waynesburg, won first and six dollars, and John S. Campbell, of Greensburg, took second and received four dollars for his efforts. SARTOR RESARTUS. The lost-and-found column in the early Greenslnirg papers was fully as interesting as any other part of the sheet. The editors had a keen sense of humor and sometimes used language which would hardly be thought in good taste at the present time. The loss of a part of some woman's rai- DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 5I9 ment gave the editor of the Greenshnrg Standard (June 25, 1842) a chance to get off the following witticism: "Found on the streets of Greensburg, a live, full grown, sawdust, bran, straw or rag bustle. Owner can obtain same by applying at this office." A VERSATILE PREACHER. Versatility was one of the marked characteristics of the old pioneer preachers, and it is probable that no early preacher in the county could turn his hand to more things than Rev. David Douglas. He was born in Mont- gomery county, Ky., in 1781, was married there in 1801, and came to tnis county in 1825. His father was killed in 1805 by the Indians in the battle at Stroud's station. I\lr. Douglas settled in Clay township about five miles west of this city, on land now owned by Nelson Mowrey. He was known as "Davy" Douglas, and for nearly forty years his voice was heard as a plain, simple, earnest preacher of the Gospel, in the woods, in the cabins, in the school houses and occasionally in the churches. He could make a plow, shoe a horse, do any kind of farm work, and he did it. He was called to settle disputes, estates, etc., and was everywhere respected as an honest, God-fearing man. He was what was called a "New Light," believed in Christian union without any frills, insisted on Bible names and the throw- ing aside of all human-made creeds. He went to his reward at Milroy in January, 1861, just as the mutterings of the approaching Civil War were being heard. A RECORD-BREAKING PIONEER. It is probable that Decatur county had in the person of Henry H. Tal- bott not only a man who held office for a longer period than any other man in the county, but in the state as well. He was born in Lincoln county, Kentucky, in March, 1800. He had become a resident of Greensburg in 1821. When the county was organized in April, 1822, he was elected county clerk and recorder, a position he held continuously until 1841. During this time he was also county auditor, a period of twenty years. For thirteen years following 1841 he was auditor and recorder and for four years there- after he was clerk, making thirty-seven years clerk, thirty-three years recorder and twenty years auditor. He would have served longer, but a new law made him ineligible. Practically all of the early public records were writ- ten by this man in his well-known clear, legible handwriting. He married Eliza Hendricks, December 20, 1824; she died in i860. The following 1 520 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. tribute is paid him: "In all his business transactions he was scrupulously- honest, and he leaves a history for honesty unparalleled in the history of the county." He died at Indianapolis, Juty 21, 1872, where he had gone to take treatment. A WILD-PIGEON ECLIPSE OF THE SUN. Wild pigeons which, years ago, went the way of the great auk and other now extinct forms of animal life, were at one time very common in Decatur county, and many of the older residents can remember when they flew so thick and close together as to obscure the sun. The largest flock of wild pigeons recorded to have passed over Decatur county migrated in i860. The immense flock of pigeons, which extended in all directions as far as the eye could reach, passed over Greensburg, February i, i860. It is said that the sun was completely shut out and the city in darkness for more than an hour. A STORY FOR MEN ONLY. There have been all kinds of clubs in Greensburg, but the Bachelor's Club, which flourished more than thirty-odd years ago, was probably the most unique club the city has ever had. Many of the members of this club are still living and, as far as the historian has found out, not one of them has lived up to the principles which he took an oath to observe. One of the local papers, in its issue of September i, 1882, says, "they met at 'Jim Polk' Ewing's office, just across from Fromer's, and marched through the alley to Ross Look's depot dining room, where they sat down to a sumptuous feast. The affair was in honor of Warren Wilson, who was just depart- ing for Chicago." The following worthies are reported as being present: W. H. Goddard, J. K. and George Ewing, J. S. Throp, Grover Stevens, George Holby, John Jarrard, J. C. McQuiston, P. A. Doyle, Joe Witten- berg, Joe Davidson, M. D. Tackett, J. E. Mendenhall, Robert Hazelrigg, Cash Lowe, Todd Wright, Dick Warthin, John Batterton, Professor Rim- yon, Frank Bennett, Ed Kessing, Lou Samuels and Dola Cunningham. How long this club lasted or just why it was finally relegated to oblivion the historian leaves to the reader, but it is fair to presume that there are many women in Greensburg who could explain its disappearance. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. ^21 A STORY CONCERNING GREENSBURG's FIRST LAWYER. The Cincinnati Enquirer several years ago told a story on James T. Brown, the first lawyer of Greensburg, who came here in the year 1822 and remained until 1838. Brown was a bachelor and a humorist of the first water. The story relates that when he was about to die at Lawrenceburg a preacher was called, and knelt in prayer by his bedside. The prayer had not proceeded far until Brown reached for his trousers and got a ten-dollar bill and shook it close to the parson's ear. The minister stopped, looked up and remarked that he did no*: make any charge for his services. "Don't you?" gasped Brown. "Well, I'll be d d if I'd make such a plea as you've made for less than ten dollars.'' DODDRIDGE ALLEY, AN ECCENTRIC PIONEER. Concerning Doddridge Alley, who represented the county in the Legis- lature in 1826 and again in 1831, a large number of good stories are still told. Alley was a chronic office-holder, was very illiterate and stuttered. Some of the stories preserved are true, and some are not, but all are worth relating. Alley introduced a bill gi\'ing sheriffs authority to perform marriage ceremonies, giving as his reason that "ministers were scarce in some localities, but that sheriffs were found everywhere." The bill was actually passed, but was never given a place in the statutes. He came in for a considerable amount of ridicule later, upon introduction of one of his bills, providing for annexation of eighteen sections of Shelby county to Decatur county, for the reason that "Shelby county was unhealthy and some of its people wanted out of it." In regard to this bill, his fellow legislators, who made him the butt of their rough humor, were rather unfair. Ten citizens of Shelby county had asked for the introduction of this bill. They were only eight miles distant from Greensburg, while, in order to attend muster, they were compelled to travel eighteen miles to Shelbyville, through a wet and unhealthy country. The measure never reached a vote. Alley once expostulated with his son-in-law because the latter had pur- chased a pistol. "Well, a man is apt to need a gun, sometimes," said the young man in defense of his act. "Yes, and a man is apt to be a d d fool sometimes," retorted his father-in-law. Once, when a candidate for some ofifice. Alley gave an immense barbecue, which was attended by several hundred voters. The cooks neglected their work and the meat was served half raw. To this culinary mishap. Alley 522 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. afterwards attributed his unexpected and o\-er\vhelming defeat. Alley was an old-fashioned, stump-speaking, bushwhacking campaigner, and in one elec- tion polled every \'ote in Clay township. BOUND BOYS. In the early history of the county the law provided for the "binding out" of chiklren who were thrown upon the count}- for support. The children were let out to the highest bidder, the one getting them agreeing to furnish them with food, clothing and shelter and give them such educational advantages as the schools of the neighborhood provided. The following communication to H. H. Talbott. first county clerk, is preserved in the public library at Greensburg: "Sir: I want you to draw a piece of writing, certifying that Stephen has served his time with me and is now a free man, and put the county seal thereon in order that he may not be interrupted in another state. "October 14. 1824. Joseph Henderson." It is ditficult to judge whether Stephen was a slave or had merely been "bound out." For the reason that he is designated merely by his first name, as was customary with slaves, and since his master feared that he might be stopped when he left home, it is possible that he might have been a negro slave. But so far as positive information is concerned no slaves were ever held in Decatur county. The first recorded instance of a boy being "bound out" or apprenticed until he attained his majority is that of Warren Jackson. It is contained in the following court record : "Return of William Ross and John Gageby, overseers of the poor for Washington township, 1825. Bound to John Springer, Warren Jackson, aged five in July, 1825, to learn the art and mystery of a house joiner." It seems that not all boys were satisfied w'ith the treatment they received at the hands of their masters and the incident below related is probably only one of many similar cases. This advertisement appeared in a Greensburg paper in 1 846 : "Fii^TY Cents Reward. — Run away from the subscriber, living in Greensburg, Decatur county, Indiana, Silas F. White, an indented apprentice to the tanning and currying business. Said apprentice is seventeen }-ears old, in February last, and was bnund to me until he reached the age of twenty years. All persons are forewarned from harboring or trusting him, as I will DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 523 pay no debts of his contracting: all persons are forewarned from employing him or paying him wages, as I am entitled to his services, and I shall look to them for pay for his services. The above reward and no charges will be paid to any person returning him to me. "May 27, 1846. Chatfield Howell.''' The guardians of apprenticed boys had to enter into a written agreement to do certain things, as is shown by the following agreement, taken from the court records of Decatur county : "Greensburg, Indiana. "This indenture, made the second day of August, 1830. W'itnesseth that Merit Duncan, aged eleven years, eleven months and twenty-four days has by and with the consent of James Floyd, guardian of the said Merit Duncan, and of his own free will hath placed and bound himself apprentice to Samuel Hood, wheelwright, of the county of Decatur and the state of Indana, which trade the said Samuel Hood now useth, and with him as an apprentice to dwell, continue and serve from the day of the date hereof until the full end and term of nine years at which time the said Merit Duncan will be twenty- one years of age, fully to be completely ended during which time the said apprentice his said master well and faithfully shall serve, his secrets keep, his lawful commands gladly do and obey ; hurt to his master he shall not do nor willingly suffer it to be done by others, but of the same to the utmost of his powers shall forthwith give notice to his said master ; the goods of his said master he shall not embezzle or waste, nor lend them without his consent to any; at cards, dice or other unlawful games he shall not play; taverns or tippling shops he shall not frequent, fornication he shall not commit, matri- mony he shall not contract ; from the service of his said master he shall not at any time depart or absent himself without his master's leave but in all things as a good and faithful apprentice shall and will demean himself and behave toward his master during said term. "And the said Samuel Hood in the art trade or mystery of a wheelwright, which he now useth with all things thereunto belonging, shall and will teach and instruct or cause to be well and sufficiently taught and instructed after the best way and manner that he can ; and shall and will find and allow unto bis said apprentice meat, drink, washing and lodging and apparel, both linen and woolen and all other necessaries fit and convenient for said apprentice during the term aforesaid, and shall also cause the said apprentice within such term to be instructed to read and write and cypher as far as the single rule of three -direct inclusive, and at the end of said term to give to said apprentice a good suit of Holy day clothes of broadcloth, a good hat, shoes, etc. 524 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. "In witness whereof the said parties have Iiereiinto set their hands and seals on the day and year above written. "James Loyd His "Merit Duncan— X "Samuel Hood (mark)." "Attest : H. H. Talbott. THE ESTR.\Y POUND. In the early days, before there were newspapers, in which advertisements could be run, to locate lost stock, the estray pound, or "stray pen," as our fathers called it, was used for the purpose of impounding all stock found run- ning at large. Then when the owner missed his property, all he had to do was to look for it in the pound, pay the proper charge and take the animal or animals home. Provision for such an institution was first made by the Decatur county board of commissioners in 1823. In this year the board ordered the county agent to let the construction of a pound, forty-four feet square, of oak posts and rails, sufficiently strong to retain any animal that might be placed therein. The contractor was to receive half his pay when his work was completed and the other half in eight months. The pound was to be erected on the public square in Greensburg. The pound was maintained on the square until 1826, when the court ordered it moved to the school lot and its size somewhat reduced. The contract for this removal was given to Isaac Plough, who received three dollars eighty-seven and one-half cents for his labor. It was maintained on this lot, Michigan avenue and Railroad street, until 1842, when it was again placed on the puljlic square. Incensed citizens, who objected to having the pen on the public square, tore it down twice within a week, and the institution passed into history. POLITICS IN 1842. In the county election of 1842 party lines were drawn only in the light for representative. David Montague was the \\'hig candidate and many voters propounded the following list of questions to him: (i) Are you an infidel in religious matters? (2) Are you an abolitionist? (3) Are you in favor of taxing distilleries so as to break them down? (4) Are you in favor of the present property law? (5) Are you in favor of a "stop law"? if so, how long? (6) Are you a member of any temperance or Washingtonian: Society ? DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 525 "Uncle Davy" came through with replies immediately. He answered the first three questions in the negative, the next two in the affirmative, and ignored the last one. He received one thousand and sixty-eight votes to eight hundred and thirty for his opponent, Harvey Dunlavey. Evidently his stand on these questions met a\ ith the approval of the voters. THE WHIG BARBECUE OF 1 844. On October 4, 1844, a Whig barbecue for the third congressional district was held in Greensburg. It was, beyond doubt, the biggest political gathering ever held in this region up to that time. There was bunting, flags and other decorations galore and ten thousand people are reported to have been present. Hon. James M. Cravens, the Whig congressman from this district, presided and P. A. Hackelman, of Rush county, C. F. Clarkson, of Franklin county, and D. C. Rich, of Jennings county, were secretaries. The principal speaker was the Hon. Caleb Smith, of Connersville, who was then considered the most eloquent speaker in the state. The meeting wasi held in the Hendricks grove, a half mile northwest of the court house, in the locality of the old orphans' home. The task of feeding the multitude was successfully accomplished. After dinner, Hon. Oliver H. Smith delivered a memorable campaign speech. At night the meeting was continued in the Presbyterian church, where Hackelman, Rich, Cravens and ]\lilton Gregg, of Dearborn countv, were the orators. On October 24, another monster rally was held at Rushville and many Decatur county Whigs attended. Clarksburg was represented in the parade at Rushville, with a huge canoe cut from a large sycamore log, •drawn by twenty white horses and filled with twenty fair maidens to represent the number of states then comprising the Union. ONE HUNDRED STRONG AND FOUR THOUSAND MILES TO GO. Many of the early citizens will recall hearing of the overland trip of the Decatur-Rush county colony of 1852. On March 8, 1852, this colony of one hundred bra\-e souls started from the Spring Hill and Richland communities on an overland journey by ox teams to far-away Oregon. They went from Madison to St. Joseph, Missouri, by boat and the remaining distance was traversed overland. After six months of privations and dangers, they landed in the Willamette valley. September 13, 1852, where they remained six years, when they moved to near The Dalles. 526 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. AN OLD-TIME DEBATING SOCIETY. During the Civil War a well organized debating society, composed of fifteen young men of Greensburg, flourished in that city. The society met every Friday evening in the office of the sheriff and discussed matters of public interest. After several lengthy arguments, the society decided that abolition of slavery would be necessary to stop the war and that the removal of General McClellan was justifiable. One of the most famous debates conducted by the society was at the court house when the justitialiility of Napoleon's banishment was discussed, J- D. Spillman and W. A. Moore taking the affirmative and R. C. Talbott and Captain Irvin, the negative. The record does not say who won. A GLIMPSE OF THE ANTI-MASONIC MOVEMENT. Some of the able debaters of the early days, according to recorded evidence, must have been Joseph Hopkins, Andrew Robison, Thomas and Cyrus Hamilton of the Kingston neighborhood. The story is told that back some time in the late twenties two youthful students at Hanover came to Kingston and issued a challenge to the whole wide world for a discussion of jMasonry. Andrew Robison and Cyrus Hamilton, although neither knew a thing about JMasonry, agreed to meet them, and, according to one who was pres- ent at the discussion, "when it was over, there was only a grease spot on the floor where the students had stood." Twenty years later, at the same place, there was held a very celebrated discussion of the subject, "Is a United States bank constitutional, accord- ing to the constitution?" The judges were Alexander and John Porter and a man named Travis. All were property owners and had been selected because every one had implicit confidence in their fairness. Disputants were John B. Trimble and James B. Yearns for the affirma- tive and William L. Douglas and Thomas Jones for the negative. Soon after the judges had retired to consider the points adduced, one of them reappeared and asked, "On which side of this (piestionis James Yearns?" He was supplied with the needed information and the judges at once filed back with a decision favoring Yearns' side. The announcement came as a surprise, the question being a partisan one and two of the judges being of the anti-bank party, which made it the DECATUR COUNTY. INDIANA. 527 more difficult to understand. Yearns, however, was a son-in-law of one of the Porters, which, it was later decided, was the senegambian in the wood pile. A CIVIL WAR DEBATE. In September, 1862, occurred a bitter joint debate between Colonel BemusdatYer and the Reverend \'an Buskirk at Milford. They were candi- dates for the Legislature on the Democratic and Republican tickets, respec- tively. \'an Buskirk took for his text the words of Stephen A. Douglas, and stuck to his text all the way through. These words were as follow : "How are we to overcome partisian antipathies in the minds of men of all parties so as to present a united front in the support of our country? Whoever is not prepared to sacrifice party organizations and platforms on the altar of his country is not worthy of the support and countenance of honest people. We must cease discussing party issues, make no allusions to old party tests, have no criminations and recriminations, indulge in no taunts one against the other as to who has been the cause of these troubles. When we shall have rescued the country and government from its perils and seen its flag floating in triumph over every inch of American soil, it will then be time enough to incjuire as to who and what has brought about these troubles upon us. Then it will Ije time enough for each of us to return to our party banners." \'an Buskirk argued that the Republican ])arty, whose candidate he was, was true to this conception, that the Republican party had eschewed its name and had nominated a state ticket, with three Republicans and three Demo- crats upon it. He also pointed out that Colonel Gavin, a Democrat, had been named for Congress. EARLY GREENSBURG LIBRARIES. A fugitive notice in a local newspaper in 1857 says that there were two public libraries then open in Greensburg every Tuesday and Friday after- noons. The McClure library was free to members of the Workingmen's Institute, others paying twenty-five cents per quarter for library privileges. The other library belonged to the township and had been established by Professor Larrabee in 1855. The records showed that in nine months five hundred and seventy-six books were taken from the JNIcClure library and four hundred and twenty-nine from the township library. No other account has been found of either librarv. 528 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. ORTHOGRAPHIC CONTESTS. Public spelling matches became very popular in the seventies and all over the country matches were held in school houses, opera houses and other places. A town in Ohio in 1875 claimed the honor of being the first to con- duct a pul:)lic spelling match and the editor of a Greensburg newspaper comes back in this wise : "The question of where the spelling mania originated is being discussed, and Ohio, with her usual brazenness, is claiming the honor. We want to say that the first public spelling match in the country took place in Greens- burg in 1874. The papers of the state made considerable fun over it at the time, and said that we were without other forms of amusement. Now they want to claim the honor of being first." One of the most famous spelling matches of forty years ago was held in the county court house on March 18, 1875, when Susie F. Wise, New Pennington, won first prize over lawyers, doctors, teachers and others. This prize was one hundred and si.xty acres of western land owned by James Hart. A second spelling match was held at the court house on March 25, of the same year, with Judge W. A. Moore and G. H. Dunn as captains. W. A. Powner was umpire and Doctor Wright pronouncer. Dunn had first choice and took F. E. Gavin. Moore took N. S. Cooper. Miss Wise, who had won the week before, went down and' out on "hostage." The last four standing were Moore, Cooper, E. T. Jordan and J. K. Ewing. In the end Cooper won. LINCOLN IN GREENSBURG. A fact not generally known is that .Vbraham Lincoln once observed a birthday in Greensburg. It was February 12, 1861, his fifty-second birth- day, and he was on his way to Washington to be sworn in as President of the United States. According to his itinerary, he was to go from Indian- apolis direct to Cincinnati, but Will Cumback prevailed upon those in charge to hold the train at Greensburg for a short time in order that Decatur county people might pay their respects to the President-elect. A meeting of prominent citizens had been held the week before to perfect arrangements. When the train stopped at the station, Mr. Lincoln appeared at the rear platform and was introduced by Will Cumback, who was one of the committee of escort. A crowd estimated at two thousand had gathered. Lincoln, after explaining that he had no time, on account of the limitations DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 529 of his schedule, to make an extended speech, thanked his auditors for their courtesy, and then, noticing that there was a band present, called for some music, adding that of course the sentiment of it would no doubt favor the Union. The crowd sang "The Flag of Our Union," the band played "Hail, Columbia" and then the train pulled out. While Lincoln was listening to the music, he was presented with a large red apple by John Dokes, a well- known character. Commenting upon the President-elect, the Grccnsburg Standard said in its next issue: "Almost everybody who saw President Lincoln as he passed through this place on last Tuesday seemed to be surprised to find him so good looking a man as he is. From what they had heard and from the pic- tures they had seen, they of course expected to see an altogether different looking man. He is not a beauty, but then he is about as good looking as Presidents generally are." THE FIRST SUNDAY SCHOOL IN DECATUR COUNTY. The first Sunday school in Decatur county was held in the fall of 1827 near the present Mt. Cannel church, two miles south of Clarksburg. There was no church building there at that time, but a log school house on Andra McCoy's farm, in which the Presbyterians, Methodists, United Brethren and New Lights had occasional services. Here was organized the first Sunday school. The officers of this first Sunday school were as follows: John Hopkins, superintendent; Zenas Darnell, assistant superintendent; Dr. Jesse M. Gillespie, secretary. The teachers were Miss Andra McCoy, Jane Don- nell (Mrs. Luther A. Donnell), Jane Throp, Elizabeth Bell and John Bell. Dr. Nathaniel Lewis was appointed to raise money to buy a library for the school, and when the books came some of the members did not like some of them and withdrew from the school, because of the fictitious character of some of the books. This school was continued until about 1830, when it was disbanded, and the Methodists, who then had a church society there, organized another Sunday school. THE ONLY LYNCHING IN DEC.VTUR COUNTY. Just once in the history of the county has mob law overruled the courts and claimed its victim. In the summer of 1879 Oscar M. Garrett, an Adams countv farmer, was arrested, charged with the murder of John Walton, a ' (34) 530 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. neighbor. Walton had a young wife in whom Garrett, aUhough a married man, took an undue interest. The crime was at once laid at his door and the widow was also arrested, charged with complicity in the deed. So strong was public sentiment against him, that Garrett took a change of venue to Bartholomew county. Mrs. Walton was tried in the local court and sen- tenced to the penitentiary for life. In the trial at Columbus the state en- deavored to show that Garrett had hired a colored man to perform the act. Garrett was acquitted and returned to Decatur county, where he was at once arrested upon another charge. Sentiment ran high, and a few nights later twenty men burst the jail door and laid hands upon their victim. He fought like a tiger, with all the madness of despair. Shrieking and bleeding, he was borne toward the door and out into the yard. All the time he furi- ously fought his assailants. When the mob at last overpowered him and strung him to a tree in the jail yard, life was almost extinct. John Stout was county sheriff at this time. He did his best to protect his prisoner, but the mob overpowered him. Under the state law at that time, Walton's widow secured a third of his estate. THE AGAPHONE. In 18^8 Israel D. Jewett, of St. Omer, invented an instrument to which he gave the name "agaphone." The county papers of that year refer to it in glowing terms and prophecy that it will supplant the telephone in a short time. The Greensbnrg Standard says that "A reporter of the Ciucinnati Gazette, who has twice visited St. Omer to inspect this invention, reports it a perfect triumph over the Edison instrument." For some reason the won- derful invention failed to materialize and nothing more is heard of it after that year. Whether it was ever used as a means of conmnmication, has not been discovered, but it seems certain that it was never manufactured for com- mercial purposes. It was in reality nothing but a telephone. PIONEER COLD STORAGE. It is claimed that Rev. Benjamin M. Nyce, of Decatur county, Indiana, was the first man to apply refrigeration to the storage of fruit. One capital- ist offered him one hundred thousand dollars for the patent rights for the city of New York, and two hundred and fifty thousand dollars was reported to have been offered him for the Louisiana concessions. He firmly declined all such oft'ers, but failed in business at last. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 53 1 A GUNPOWDER PLOT. Emulating Guy Fawkes, three young men, in a spirit of play, on the evening of February i8, 1876, placed a beer keg containing gunpowder against the south side of the court house and touched it off. All the windows on that side of the building were shattered and bits of the keg were blown across the square, breaking a number of windows in business places. John Moody, Hick James and a Gageby boy were arrested, but were later released. TO BUSS OR NOT TO BUSS. In the summer of 1912 there was organized at St. Paul one of the most unique clubs which has ever arisen in the county, or in the state or nation. The cause leading up to its organization is shrouded in more or less mystery, the charter members refusing to divulge the reasons which lead to its forma- tion, although there are those who have offered a veiy satisfactory explana- tion. The Indianapolis News, in the fore part of August, had a long article on this club in which its aims were set forth in detail. This club bore the culinary-osculatory title of the "St. Paul Anti-Spooning Club" and was limited to twenty members, divided equally between the two sexes. Whether the fair maidens of St. Paul originated the club or whether it was the young men, has not been ascertained ; neither has it been possible to find out the nature of the initiatory services. The supposition is that the neophytes were initiated in pairs and forced to abjure all those practices common to amorously-stricken couples. In the constitution, which was the last thing every member was allowed to kiss, the initiate was sworn to forego all "flirt- ing, fussing, spooning, kissing, holding of hands, or any demonstrations of an amorous nature." (See Greensbiirg News, August 9, 1912.) For the first violation of any one of these rules the offender was compelled either to hold the hands of the town clock or salute the mouth of Flatrock. The second violation was met with instant expulsion from the club and perpetual ostracism from all good society in the town. This club, so organized and with such excellent eugenic and sanitary provisions for its members, opened its first meeting with the full membership present. After the regular busi- ness of the club was concluded, on this opening night, a social hour was indulged in for the general welfare of the members. At the next weekly meeting the club unanimously voted to disband, the fair damsel moving its dissolution saying that she voiced the sentiments of her nine sisters when she said that such an oroanization was detrimental to the advancement of home 532 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. life in i^articular and civilization in general. Thus died one of the most unique organizations which the mind of man ever conceived, and peace and contentment once more reigned supreme in St. Paul. "aunt jane" warriner and her well. The location of the new Y. M. C. A. building on the lot where "Aunt Jane" Warriner lived for so many years has recalled to many of the older residents of Greensburg that old pioneer lady and her famous well. This lot was sold at the first public sale of lots on the first Monday in Septeml^er, 1822, to Ella Warriner (a man) for the sum of ten dollars. The directors of the Young Men's Christian Association paid seven thousand five hundred dollars for this same lot in 191 4. "Aunt Jane" Warriner was born at Greensburg, Pennsylvania, in 1800 and was married to Edmund Heuston in 1819. In the winter of 1820-21 her husband came to Decatur county with Col. Thomas Hendricks and helped to survey the county in the spring and summer of 1821. During the follow- ing winter "Aunt Jane" came down the Ohio river in a barge as far as Cincinnati. From there she walked to Greensburg, alone through the for- ests, carrying her babe at her breast. Her husband died a few years later and, on May 26, 183 1, she married Franklin Warriner, a brother of Ella. It was soon thereafter that they located on the present Y. M. C. A. lot in a rude log cabin. They dug a well in front of the house, which, from about 1835 to 1875, a period of forty years, was a social center for the whole town.. People came for squares around to get water from this well, school children flocked to it on their way to and from school, and all were welcomed by "Aunt Jane." About 1875 the well was filled up and the once famous gathering place is now only a pleasant memory. a two-dollar prayer. The Bible says the laborer is worthy of his hire and George W. dem- ons, a prominent member of the Baptist church, of Greensburg, is a firm believer in the tnith of this statement. In the spring of 1915 Mr. demons happened to attend services at the First Methodist church and Reverend Dodridge, knowing that he often offered public prayer in his own church, called upon Mr. demons to pray upon this particular occasion. Mr. demons gave a very effective prayer and during the following week sent a bill to Reverend Dodridge for two dollars for his services. Whether the preacher was DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. ' 533 expected to reimburse Mr. demons for his services when he called upon him is unknown, but he felt that Mr. demons by right owed him ten dollars for his semion at the time in question. Accordingly, Reverend Dodridge made out a statement for ten dollars for services rendered, and this he took in person to Mr. demons and presented it to him with the request that he (Mr. demons) still owed hinr eight dollars. Mr. demons still owes the preacher eight dollars. CENTER OF POPULATION. According to the United States census of 1890, the center of population for continental United States was in Decatur county, about ten miles south of Greensburg and a mile and a lialf northeast of Westport. When the exact spot was located, in the spring of 1891, the Cliicago Herald asked and obtained permission from the owner of the farm, A. M. Armstrong, on which it was located, to put up an appropriate monument. On Sunday, May 10, 1 89 1, the monument was dedicated with appropriate ceremonies. Ad- dresses were made by Will Cumback, Frank E. Gavin and H. C. Miller, and A. M. Willoughby read a historical sketch suitable to the occasion. Music was furnished by the Greensburg band and the Mapleton glee club. DRIPPING SPRINGS GARDEN. It is not generally known that an industrj' has been started in Decatur county which promises to become one of the largest of its kind in the United States. In the spring of 19 15 Mrs. Frances F. Ballard and Mrs. Nellie F. Muehler started a flower farm a half mile northeast of St. Paul and before the middle of the summer of the same year had twenty acres in flowers. They intend to enlarge their acreage as fast as they find a market for their product and hope to have one of the largest flower farms in the country within a few years. They have a farm of one hundred and seventy acres, with sixty-five acres under cultivation, and it is their intention to place all of the cultivated land in flowers. Strange to say, they do not intend to make their money from the sale of flowers, but from the bulbs of the flowers. At the present time (June, 1915) they have eighteen acres devoted to four flowers, namely, peonies, asters, gladiolas and dahlias. The other two acres in flowers are planted in Shasta daisies, delphinium, rudbekias, and miscel- laneous flowers. The farm is well supplied with springs which run the year around and this feature gives the farm its name, "Dripping Springs Garden." BIOGRAPHICAL JOHN E. ROBBINS. Old Decatur has given to the United States many citizens of wide prom- inence in various lines of human endeavor, many men of state prominence and a few men who have attained even national distinction. As a farmer, stockman and business man, Decatur county has produced perhaps no more widely-known man than John E. Robbins, who has won pre-eminence in many phases of human endeavor. In the first place, he is the proprietor and general manager of the John E. Robbins Company, manufactures of "Saltone," a medicated salt, which has an enormous sale among stockmen throughout the entire country, an enterprise which has brought thousands of dollars to its owner and proprietor. In the second place, he is one of the most up-to-date and progressive farmers to be found in the Middle West, and a man who has succeeded in a large way, merely because he has applied to the farm the same principles which he might apply to the operation of a railroad, a factory or a large department store. As a breeder, however, it is possible that Mr. Robbins is most widely known. A man of wide vision, he recognized the larger opportunities and, in 1896, while at Jersey Island, purchased ten head of Jersey cows, which were considered by experienced breeders on the Island to be the best that could be procured there. As a breeder of Hampshire hogs, he is equally well known and has accom- plished equally remarkable feats. No attempt to explain his large success would be complete, unless one were able to met and know the man himself. It is significant, however, that he is descended from the best stock that Decatur county has ever produced. His father, his grandfather and his remote ances- tors were men of large vision and great accomplishments, and it is true, no doubt, that John E. Robbins has inherited from these worthy progenitors many of his most sterling traits of character and much of his capacity for large business enterprise. John E. Robbins was born March 29, 1864, on the old Robbins home- 536 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. stead, three-quarters of a mile south of Greensburg. Here, in a beautiful countr}' home, surrounded with all of the opportunities which the father of wonderful ability could give to his son, he grew to manhood. The house in which he was born and in which he lived during the early years of his life, was supplanted by a magnificent brick house, erected by the father in 1868. Since he was twenty years old, he has been well-known in this state as a breeder. His business, of this character, has grown from year to year until, in 19 14, he raised five hundred head of Hampshire hogs, and it was only in 191 1 that he began breeding Hampshires. He sells fancy sows and boars all over the country and has exhibited his choice animals at state fair in Indiana, Kentucky, Illinois, W^isconsin and Iowa and the international live stock -expositions. He has carried away a majority of the prizes and ribbons at each exhibit. A list of prizes he has won on his most famous animals would far exceed the available limits of this biographical review. Nevertheless, at his auction sale held on January 8, 1914, the "Saltone Stock Farm" established a new record. Sixty-nine Hampshire hogs sold for eight thousand seven hundred dollars, a previously unheard-of average price of one hundred and twenty-six dollars a head. "Lady Over" brought five hun- dred and twenty-five dollars; "Saltone II.," five hundred and ten dollars; "Vesta," four hundred and fifteen dollars, and "Bessie Burk," four hundred and five dollars. Ten hogs sold at an average of three hundred and thirty dollars, twenty hogs sold at an average of two hundred and forty-five dol- lars, and forty at an average of one hundred and seventy-one dollars. Mr. Robbins attributes a part of his success with Hampshire hogs to the liberal use of Saltone, a medicated salt, which he himself manufactures. At the international live stock exposition at Chicago in 191 3, his herd of Hampshire hogs won two grand championships, and three championships, the prizes including, however, not only the prizes won at international live stock exposi- tion, but also at the Iowa, Kentucky, Indiana and Illinois state fairs of the same year. In 191 5 he sold one hog for one thousand and twenty-five dol- lars. Formerly a noted importer of Jersey cattle, Mr. Robbins made many trips to Jersey Isle, and, during his career, imported many thoroughbred Jersey cattle. Beginning in 1896, for fourteen years he bred and sold Jer- seys and was the only man in the United States who ever bred, raised and sold a Jersey bull which brought the enormous price of ten thousand dol- lars. This excellent animal, " Silverine Coomassie," was sold to Dr. C. E. Still in the spring of 1905. Of the Saltone enterprise, it may be said that it is manufactured by the John E. Robbins Company, which was organized on December i, 191 1. i DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 537- It is especially designed to destroy worms in live stock and to tone up animals physically. The formula was discovered in an enterprise launched by ;\Ir. Robbins under the trade-mark name, "Saltone." This enterprise has been very successful, and, in nonnal times, the company employs about forty people and the sales in 1914 amounted to more than eighty thousand dollars. With all of these enterprises to look after, it is not hard to conclude that John E. Robbins is a very busy man. He owns two hundred and seventy-five acres of land, and it is upon this farm, situated near Greens- burg, that his extensive business operations are carried on. Personally, he is an intelligent and progressive citizen and an independent thinker and voter, although nominally he is identified with the Republican party. Fraternally, he is a member of the Masonic lodge ; the Murat Temple ; nobles of the Alystic Shrine, of Indianapolis; the Knights of Pythias, the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks and the Fraternal Order of Eagles. Mr. Robbins has been twice married, the first time, December 24, 1884, to Lou Elder, the daughter of James Elder. She died on February 2, 1885, only a short time after their marriage. Mr. Robbins was married again, December 11, 1912, to Elizabeth C. Ehrhard, the daughter of Adam Ehr- hard, of Greensburg. To this second marriage has been born one son, John Everman, who was born February 4, 1915. John E. Robbins is a son of John E., Sr., and Nancy (Hunter) Rob- bins. The genealogy of the Robbins family l:)egins with Bethiah Vickery, who was born on December i, 1760, and who married William Robbins. To them were born three children : Albe, Charity and Benjamin. William Rob- bins was killed in the Revolutionary War, soon after enlisting, and his widow married a second William Robbins in Guilford county. North Caro- lina. To this couple were born nine children : Marmaduke and Jacob, born on May 15, 1783; Elizabeth, born on February 5, 178S; Polly, born on April 9, 1 791; Nathaniel, born on April 5, 1793: John, born on February 8, 1795: William, born on August 6, 1797; Dosh^, born on May 20, 1804.. William Robbins, the second husband of Mrs. Robbins, was born on October 21, 1 76 1, in Randolph county. North Carolina. In October, 1777, when six- teen years of age, he enlisted in the Revolutionary army, sei"ving until 1781 under Capt. Joseph Clark and Colonel Dugan and Col. Anthony Sharp. He left Virginia for Henry county, Kentucky, and, in 182 1, came to Decatur county, settling nine and one-half miles south of Greensburg. Here he made a home among the timbered hills. Trees were cleared away and a new log house of one room was erected with a shed, in which was built a room for carpet weaving and many kinds of cloth. In September 11, 1834, Will- 538 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. iam Robbins passed away and was buried at Alt. Pleasant cemetery. The third William Robbins, heretofore referred to in the children born to the second William Robbins and Bethiah Vivery, was born in the Blue Ridge Alountains of Virginia. He was taken by his parents to Henry county, Kentucky, and accompanied them to Indiana, when the family came in 1821. At this time he was twenty-four years of age. He selected the site for a home for him- self about one and one-half miles north of his father's home, but the next year returned to Kentucky and was married to Eleanor Anderson, of that state. Upon returning to his new home with his bride, and during the same year, three sisters and two brothers, John and Nathaniel, settled in the same vicinity. A short time later other relatives of the Robbins family came to the same township. The Robbins family became prominent both as to num- ber and influence in the early aft'airs of this section. Nathaniel Robbins was the first justice of the peace in Sand Creek township, ^^'illiam and Eleanor Robbins lived on the fami originally selected as their home, during the remainder of their lives. They had four children: Sarilda, born in October, 1823, who married William Styers; John E., born on February 20, 1825, who married Nancy O. Hunter; James G., born on June 10, 1827, who mar- ried Elmira Stout, and Merrit H., born in 1829, who married Jeannette Gilchrist. William Robbins died on February 3, 1868, and his wife died four years later. John E. Robbins, Sr., was born on his father's farm near Greensburg, February 20, 1825, and was married on November 7, 1844. to Nancv Hunter, the daughter of Nathaniel and Elizabeth Hunter. After their marriage, the young couple went to housekeeping on a farm of forty acres given them by Mr. Robbins' father. After living on this farm until Februarv 15, 1848, they purchased one hundred and sixty acres of land one mile south of Greensburg, where they made their home until their death. To this pur- chase, however, they added large tracts of land until they owned three thousand acres in Decatur county and twenty-four hundred acres in Bartholo- mew county, besides personal property of great value. In 1882, John E. Robbins helped to organize the Third National Bank of Greensburg, and became a director and its president, in which capacitv he served until his death. Under his direction and management, the Third National Bank grew to be one of the most substantial and successful insti- tutions in the country. Mr. Robbins passed away on July 22, 1896. His wife, wlio had shared all of his interests and labors, a most willing- and DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 539 •efficient helpmate, continued to li\-e on the farm until her long and useful life closed, May 2, 1905. John E. and Xancy Robbins had fourteen children, of whom the names of twelve are herewith given: Elizabeth Ellen, deceased; Charlotte Adeline, deceased ; Sarilda Ruth, who married H. F. Smiley ; Minerva Jane, who became the wife of Archie Gilchrist; Nancy Elmira, who married J. B. Kitchen : Sarah Jeanette, deceased ; William Hunter, who married Cora Sefton ; Clara Alinda, who is the wife of Frank B. Kitchin; Olive Ida, who married Robert McCoy; John Evemian, who mar- ried Louisa Elder; Frank Roscoe, who married Katie Sefton, and Eliza Angelina, who became the wife of Will Q. Elder. John Everman, given in the above list of children as having married Louisa Elder, is the John E. Robbins of this sketch. Mr. Robbins is at the present time at the very zenith of his usefulness, but it must not be assumed that he is at the zenith of his power and prosperity. As a matter of fact, he is hardly fifty-one years old today, and it is well known among men who have studied personal careers that great fortunes are generally acquired after the age of fifty. The people of Decatur county have every reason in the world to be proud of the career of John E. Robbins, and there is every reason to believe that they are proud of what he has accomplished ; proud of the fame and name he has given to this section; gratified that the exceptional oppor- tunities of w^hich he has taken advantage, lie here at their threshold. GEORGE S. LITTELL. When a neighbor, himself a successful business man, says of another, "He is the greatest worker I ever saw," it is safe to assume that the latter is a success financially, and a citizen looked up to as a leader, whether the locality in which he lives is a town or city. There is a sort of energy that is in\-incible, an ambition that knows no defeat, and when these characteristics, are combined with a genial nature, we usually find a man well known and well liked, a power among his fellow men and a citizen worthy of honor and esteem. When such a man comes of a line of ancestry living in the same neighborhood for many years, he has an added prestige, for he and his family become a vital part of the community whose well-being is a matter of their personal concern. Such has been the relationship of George S. Littell and liis ancestors to Decatur county, that its history could not be written without prominent mention of them. And today, Mr. Littell and his father in their 540 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. beautiful home are important factors in the commercial and social life of their community. George S. Littell was born at Mt. Pleasant, Ohio, on June i, 1854. His, father, Benjamin Littell, who still lives with his son, George, is hale and hearty at ninety-five, and retains much of his former vigor and interest in life. His mother, who was before her marriage, Jane Van Sant, was the daughter of Reuben Yan Sant. former county treasurer of Hamilton county, Ohio. The grandfather of George Littell was also named Benjamin, who passed away during the cholera epidemic, leaving a widow and four children. Benjamin. Elizabeth, Sarah Ann and Clara. Of Benjamin, the father of Mr. Littell. we shall have more to say later on in the present article, for he. too, has an interesting life history. His wife, who was born in 1822, lived until 1907, and died at the age of seventy-eight. Their children were, Alan- son, a merchant of Greensburg; William T., a bricklayer and mason living in Indianapolis ; Frank, deceased ; Mrs. Adelia McCoy, a widow who is now caring for the home of our subject and his aged father; George S., in whom our present interest centers; Eliza, wife of Phil Weyniar, of Greensburg; Samuel V. and James S., merchants of the same city; Mrs. C. D. Tillson, also a resident of Greensburg, and Curtis R., who lives in Washington state. The husband of Mrs. McCoy, mentioned above, was city councilman eight years, and has one son, Frank, who is deputy postmaster of Greensburg. Benjamin Littell, the father of George, first came to Greensburg in 1863 to manufacture brick for Augusta Lathrop, so it was on easy matter for the son not only to be interested in that line of work but to pick up a practical education in brickmaking. George was two years old when his father moved from Mt. Pleasant, Ohio, to Ripley county, Indiana, and eight years afterward they came to Greensburg. W'hen George began working in the lirick plant of his father, it was on the land which became the first fair- ground of the county as well as the location of the first gas well ever drilled in the county. Here father and son continued working together until 1882, when the latter went in business for himself, making and selling brick until 1905. At that time his place of business was on East Xorth street. \\'hile located here, he made brick for the Union Traction station, the Big Four livery stable, the home of Robert Watson, the Worthan Block, the east half of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows Home (first building), the resi- dence of Charles Zoller and .\rthur Hutchinson, the enginehouse and round- house and the De.Vrmimd hotel. For the construction of the latter building, he not only made and molded every brick, but also delivered them himself. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. ^41 It was at the time that he was engaged in this strenuous work that the remark was made by Mr. DeArmond that George was the greatest worker he ever saw. Besides being an expert in the manufacture of brick, Mr. Littell has been and is now a successful real estate dealer and live stock merchant. It has been said of him that "there is nothing in that line that he will not trade for." It seems that he is too ambitious to be contented with raising and selling live stock. He must own and place on the race-track famous horses, such, for instance, as "Exchange Boy," the renowned horse which he bred and raised. It is said of this wonderful creature that "considering the num- ber of races in which he started, he holds the best record of any horse in the world today." He started in seventy-two races, and was behind the money but six times, making a record of 2:17}:^ on a half-mile track. Mr. Littell was also the owner of "Bunyp," the horse with no Iiair, which was exhibited with great success in all the large cities in the country, and was considered the greatest freak horse in the world. Having an active temperament, there seems to be a strain of adventure in Mr. Littell which gives him many and various interests. For example, he at one time was owner and manager of a "carnival" which consisted of several amusement features, including a merry-go-round, a Ferris wheel, miniature railroads, etc. At the first street fair ever held in Greensburg, he won the first ribbon for saddle-horse and rider over the competition of the best riders of Kentucky. Mr. Littell is still engaged in the real estate business, and beside hand- ling property for others, has a great deal of his own to look after. He owns ninety acres on the outskirts of Greensburg, near his own magnificent residence, and valuable land on Main street, including the site and building of a three-story brick block. Moreover, he is the owner of fifty houses in Greensburg, some large, some small, and of four hundred and fifty acres of land in Decatur county, and eight hundred acres in Nebraska. Mr. Littell is a Republican, and was at one time chairman of the county central committee. His interest in politics has been genuine, and his influence among politicians is that of a leader. He is a member in good standing of the Odd Fellows lodge. Being a business associate of his fatlier, the lives of these two men have been very closely bound together, and it is almost impossible to write of one without frequent reference to the other. In all of the activities of the younger Littell, he has had the interest and co-operation of his father, 542 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. who was an active business man for many years in Greensburg, and is now the oldest citizen of Decatur county. He was born on December 24, 1820, in Cincinnati, wliere he Hved until early manhood. The Littell home was on Fifth street. His father, a brickmaker, was a native of Vermont, so it seems that the brickmaking industry in this family extended through three generations. After moving to Alt. Pleasant, nine miles from Cincinnati, they made this home until 1856, when they again changed their place of abode, this time going to Ripley county, Indiana, where the elder Littell engaged in farming until 1863, and then returned to brickmaking, his first contract being to supply brick for the building at the southwest corner of pul)lic square, known as "crook's corner." He also manufactured the brick for the Moss House, now the DeArmond, and Annex hotel, of which Mr. Minear is the proprietor. Remaining in the brick business until 1890, he then retired, and has made his home with his son. He is now in his ninety-fifth year, but is physically sound and mentally alert although he has been totally blind for the past six years. Aluch of the success of this family has been due to the fact that they Avere hard-working and had good business ability. Benjamin Littell used to work early and late, and taught his children the \-alue of a good day's work. He has always been a genial, lovable man. and in spite of his strenu- ous life, has taken the time to be kind. It was said of him that he could do more work than two or three men, and had the happy faculty of being able to teach others how to work. As an employer, he was wise and kind, knew how to handle men, and while i)eaceable in his nature, when occasion demanded it, he could defend his rights with physical emphasis if necessary. Li other words, he was a fighter who never gave up when once he had been aroused. He may be regarded as a typical pioneer, for he came to Indiana in the state's infancy. .\ lasting testimony to the thoroughness and honesty with which the Littells did their work, is found in the fact that many of the handsome and substantial structures standing in Greensburg today are made of the material manufactured by them, the bricks made b}' them being molded by hand. Even at his advanced age, Mr. Littell retains much of his vigorous personality, and is a constant source of happiness to his son and daughter, who are tenderly caring for him during his declining years. During his many years of residence in this county, it is not surprising that he has made hosts of warm friends, having both the faculty of making new friends while retaining the old. While his educational advantages were not what they are today, he has a brilliant mind and a retentive memory. He is an interesting DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 543 conversationalist, and is versatile both in mind and in achievement. As a business man, his remarkable memory was an important asset. The home of the Littells is one of the landmarks of Greensburg, for no expense has been spared to make it both comfortable and beautiful. With such an energetic father and grandfather, we do not wonder that the mental inheritance of George Littell has been along business lines as well as in matters of politics and social affiliations as exemplified in lodge and fraternal organizations. To say that such a career has been useful is not sufficient, for the history of counties and states are proof of the fact that their growth and settlement would have been retarded, if not absolutely impossible, but for the zeal, the perseverance and the energy of such men as we have here described. Their lives have gone into the making of Decatur county, and it may be said of the younger man. especially, that he knew how to take advantage of every opportunity, and to mold it into reality, thus not only to increase his own fortune, but that of the commun- ity as well. HARRY BOYD. Harry Boyd, secretary of the Union Trust Company, of Greensburg, Indiana, who has risen in life to his present position of prominence in the financial circles of Decatur county, was born on October i8, i8'6i, in Jen- nings county, Indiana, the son of William and Jane (Dickerson) Boyd, the former of whom was of Irish parentage, and who was born in Dearborn county, Indiana. His wife, a native of Jennings county, was of German descent. They settled in Jennings county, Indiana, after their marriage, and in 1865 Mrs. Boyd died. After her death, William Boyd was mar- ried, secondly, to Mary Marryman. By his first marriage, William Boyd had seven children, only one of whom, Harry, is now living. He was a Democrat in politics and for some time filled the office of assessor. Self-made and self-educated, Harry Boyd, the subject of this sketch, was finally able to prepare himself for the schoolroom and taught for four years, becoming finally the bookkeeper for Mr. Mitchell at Letts Corner. After holding this position for six months, he taught school at Letts Corner for a part of one term and then returned to Mr. Mitchell's employ. Subse- quently, he became a partner with W. T. and J. G. Adams, merchants at Letts Corner, and then, in partnership with Mr. Mitchell, opened the first hardware store at Letts. After a time, he traded his interest for a farm and 544 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. was engaged in farming for four years. Not finding the farm everything that he had hoped it to be, 2^Ir. Boyd and Mr. Adams purchased the Moore store and continued in partnership for some time, when Mr. Boyd came to Greensburg, as secretary of tiie Union Trust Company. In 1888 Harry Boyd was married to Carrie I. Mitchell, the daughter of 01i\er S. and Mary E. jMitchell, the former of whom, a farmer and merchant, \\'as a native of Decatur county. He died in 1897 and his wife .TISTTS It. McCOY. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 593 •ever conducted in Decatur county. She was the mother of nine children, Cohimbus, George W., John H., Kate, Parthena E., the wife of David L. Miller, Sutherland, Benjamin M., Amanda and Justus Barton. The present residence of the McCoys on the old McCoy homestead, which is a substantial and attractive dwelling, was built hy Sutherland McCoy, Andra having built and lived in a log house. The latter, who was a strong man, an industrious worker and an enterprising citizen, was emin- ently respected during his day and generation by the people of Decatur county, and being elected as a county commissioner of this county in 1853, served thereafter a term of six years. The late Sutherland McCoy, who was the seventh child born to his parents, Andra and Margaret (Hopkins) McCoy, pioneers of this county, crossed the plains to the Pacific coast in 1852, shortly after reaching his majority, proceeding with a company of sixty-three men from Shasta Valley, to which place they had gone to drive back the Indians. After being actively engaged for a ])eriod of thirty-three days, during which the party participated in many thrilling exploits, they returned with only twenty-seven of the original party of sixty-three men, thirty-six having been killed and wounded. Sutherland McCoy himself was wounded in the neck by an Indian arrow. At the outbreak of the Civil War, Sutherland McCoy responded to one of the early calls for \-olunteers and enlisted in Company G, Seventh Indiana Volunteer Infantry. During the war he was engaged in many severe battles, among which were those of South Mountain, Antietam, Fredericksburg, Rappahannock, Gettysburg, Thorough Gay, Mine Run, etc. Returning from the war, Sutherland McCoy settled down to the peace- ful pursuit of agriculture, and about ten years after the close of the Civil War was married. May 25, 1875, to Priscilla Kincaid, who was born, Octo- ber I, 1847, in Decatur county, Indiana. Four children were born to bless this marriage, one of whom, the third child, Mary J., who was born, June 5, 1883, died, September 5, 1899. Of the three living children, Ella was born. May 5, 1877. Amanda, who was born, January 27, 1880, was married, March 13, 1901, to Clyde William Kitchin, who was born in January, 1879, in Decatur county, Indiana. They now reside on a farm in Rush county, Indiana, and have five children, May Florence, born December 10, 1901 ; Martha Amanda, born November 5, 1903; Ruth and Ruby, twins, born June 4, 1907, and Clara Margaret, November 4, 19 13. John Andra, the youngest child of Sutherland and Priscilla AlcCoy, was born, April 14, 1887, ^" ■*.>;■■ \ DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 633 a native of the north of England, liorn near tlie Scottish line, wlio married Anna Blackburn. Their children were, Nancy, Mary Ann, Vastine, Benja- min, James Harvey, Elizabeth, Isaac Newton, Presley C, Jeretta and Marie. Dr. John C. Alexander and Nancy Wilson were married, August 27, 1822, and were the parents of seven children, Angeline, born on May 10, 1823, who married Rev. Erastus Thayer; John H., David Wesley, March 4, 1830, died in September, 1863; James Wilson, Jr., May 12, 1837, died on January 2, 1854; Nancy Jane, October 16, 1832, who married Jacob Harness; William Fethian and Guy Smith, twins, at Danville, Illinois, December 4, 1839. William F. died on Octol^er 7, 1847, and Guy Smith became a lawyer and, during the Civil War, was second lieutenant in (7oiupany F, Sixty-second Regiment Illinois Volunteer Infantry. Subse(|uentlv, he was promoted to first lieutenant, captain and major and was mustered out of the service as inspector-general, with the rank of lieutenant-colonel, November 30, 1865. At this time he was not twenty-one years old. Educated in the country schools of Illinois and at Danville, that state, after his father's death. Dr. John H. Alexander moved to Palestine, Illinois, where he attended the Parrish Academy and later the Ohio Medical College at Cincinnati. In these times the schools were very crude, especially the buildings in which they were housed. He crossed the plains to California in 1850, by mule team, during the gold fever and spent eight years in the West. Locating in Decatur county, July 7, 1858, for the practice of his profession, four years later, on September 2"], 1862, he enlisted in the Twenty-seventh Regiment, Indiana Volunteer Infantry, under Col. Silas Colgrove, and was promoted to surgeon, July 15, 1864, having lieen commissioned assistant surgeon, September ij, 1862. He was mustered out of service on November 4, 1864. In Deceiuber, i860. Doctor .\lexander was married to Mary Tarking- ton, who was born on b""ebruary 23, 1834, in Greensburg, Indiana, a daughter of Rev. Joseph Tarkingtcn, a well-known ]jioneer minister of the Methodist church. ]Mary Tarkington attended Mrs. Larabee's school for young ladies at Greencastle, Indiana, from 1848 to 185 1, in which latter year she gradu- ated. i\Irs. Laraliee was the wife of Prof. William Larabee of Asbury Col- lege, now DePauw University. She is an aunt of the well-known Infliana author. Booth Tarkington. Dr. and Mrs. .Alexander have had two children, John T,, who lives in Greensburg, and Joseph H., a traveling drug salesman of Springfield, Illinois. John T., who also is a travding salesman, married Claudia Hill. Joseph H. married Myrilla .\nderson and they have one child, Margaret June. •634 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. A ])racticini;- physician in I Jccatnr connty ever since the close of the Civil War, Doctor Alexander serxed fonrteen years as secretary of the Injard of pension examiners. A Repnblican in politics, he served as secretary of the county board of health for o\-er ten years. He was a member of the county and state medical societies and also a delegate to the .\nicrican Alcdical Association in 1HH2. He was also in charge of the Odd Fellows' home for six and one-half years. Fraternally, he is a member of tlie Independent Order of Odd F'ellows, having joined that order in 1874. and is a charter memljer of Mil ford Lodge. Doctor and ]\lrs. Alexander are prominent members of the Methodist Episcopal church at Greensburg. where the Doctor has lived in his ])rcsent fine home since 1892. HUGH THOMAS McCRACKEN. Hugh Thomas McCracken is one of the well-known, thrifty and suc- cessful farmers of historic old FTigit township, Decatur county, Indiana, who owns two hundred and forty-five acres of well-cultivated lad, well located, fertile and highly productive. He is, in the most exacting interpre- tation of the term, a twentieth century farmer, and one who, because he knows how to farm, has always ]:)een satisfied to live in the country and to enjoy life in the open with his wife and children for his nearest and closest companions. Having Ijuilt a comfortable home many }'ears ago, the Mc- Cracken family is well situated to enjoy all the comforts and con\-eniences of country life, and they are among the most intelligent, up-to-date and progressi\'e people of a township, which in pioneer times has furnished the bone and sinew that has made Decatur county famous in the Hoosier state. Hugh Thomas McCracken was born on November 22, 1843, on the farm where he now lives, the son of John James and Sarah Ann McCracken, the former of whom was born on Octnber 6, 1S20, and xvho died in 187S. He was a son of James and Sallx- (Meek) McCracken, and was brought to Decatur county, Indiana, ]>y the parents when three years old. James McCracken, who was born on November 6, 1787, in T\entuck_\', who married Sally Meek, born in August, 1784, settled nn hmd in the neighborhood of his grandson's farm, was a tanner bv trade and learned to write Ijv markine on leather. An elder in the .Social Reformed Presbyterian church, he was well known during his day and generation. He and bis wifi' had se\-en children, Hugh T., born on December IQ, 1810, died in infancx-; Thdinas, DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 635 April 12, 1S12, married Nancy Patton; Elizabeth, March 12, 1814, married Samuel L. Anderson; Martha, May 12, 1815, became the wife of John Kincaid; Sally Ann, September 26, 1817, married Thomas Meek, October 4, 1838. John J. was the father of Hugh Thomas McCracken; Adam R., May 30, 1824. and married Mary J. Rankin, March 13, 1851. Reared on the pioneer farm of his father, John J. McCracken event- ually settled on the farm and lived where James Maxwell now lives. He was widely known, especially as one of the foremost Democrats of Decatur county, and as a meniljer of the Social Reformed Presbyterian church. John J. and Sarah Ann AicCracken had ten children, William David died in 1913; Hugh Thomas is the subject of this sketch ; Martha is the wife of Samuel Stewart, of Rushville, Indiana; Mary died in youth; Benjamin B. lives in Rush county ; James, who was twice married, by his second marriage to Mary Spillman, had four children ; Newton Jasper lives in Shelbyville ; John Wilson and Gilbert Gordon live in Alabama; Mrs. Myrta Ann Foley lives in •Greensburg. Educational facilities were considerably limited during the boyhood and youth of Hugh Thomas McCracken, and his education was confined to a limited attendance at Springhill and Mt. Carmel schools. As soon as he was old enough, he assisted his father with the farm work on the old homestead farm and when he was married moved into the old house standing on his farm. By purchasing his sister's interest, he received eighty acres of his father's land, which by diligence and careful management and long and arduous toil, he has increased to two hundred and fort}--seven acres. He now owns practically all of the old home place. On October 27, 1864, Mr. McCracken was married to Martha L. Kin- caid, who was born on May 24, 1841, in Fugit township, and who is the daughter of John and Priscilla (Alexander) Kincaid, natives of Kentucky. The latter, who w'as reared in Rush county, Indiana, was the daughter of John Alexander, who was borii in 1813, and who died in April, 1895. It was a son of John Kincaid who entered the Kincaid land in 1821, and established a home in 1829. By his first marriage, John Kincaid had two children, Mrs. Martha L. McCracken, and ]\Iary, deceased, the wife of David Martin, deceased; another child, John Alexander, born to this first marriage, had died in infancy. The mother dying in 1844. John Kincaid was married, a second time, to Nancy Alexander, sister of his first wife, who bore him seven children, John Andrew, deceased ; Mrs. Priscilla Jane iNIcCoy, •of Fugit township; Rhoda Margaret, deceased; John i\.ndrew, who died at 636 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. the age of twenty-one; William Jasper, of near Springhill ; Gilbert Gordon, who H\'es on the liome place, and Cyrus, deceased. To Mr. and Mrs. Hugh McCracken four children have been born, Cynthia Ann, the wife of Rufus Moore, who has four children, Lillian Ellen, Walter Thomas, Mary Ann ; Ellen ?\Ioore married Thomas Kitchin, of Fugit township, and thev ha\'e one son, John Robert; Sarah Helen married the Rev. Fred Schmunk. of Moorefield ; Mary E. married Fern Power, who is now deceased, and who left one child, Ruth; Wilma Orta married James Maxwell, and lives on the old homestead in Fugit township ; they have one son, William Thomas. Politically, Mr. McCracken is a ])rominent leader in the councils of the Democratic party in Decatur county, and especially in Fugit township, where he lives. Mr. and Mrs. McCracken and family are members of the United Presbyterian church at Springhill. The career of Hugh T. McCracken. it must be conceded, measures up well with the services of his distinguishetl ancestors, who were pioneers in this county, since he has. with somewhat better opportunities than were enjoyed by his forefathers, established a comfortable home, and reared a family of children to equally honorable and useful lives. From the stand- point of service the enterprising thrift}- cultivation of his farm in Fugit town- ship is sufficient to entitle him to honorable mention as a citizen of this great county. SAMUEL L. JACKSON. One of the most picturesque farms and one oi the most magnificent country homes to be found anywhere in Decatur county, is located in \Vash- ington township, and comprises four hundred and eighty acres of fertile land, owned by Mr. and Mrs. Samuel L. Jackson, well-known citizens of this countv. With a thoroughly modern home and beautiful, well-kept grounds, shaded by giant trees, especially neat and attractive driveways, this attractive farm bespeaks the intelligence, industry and fine appreciation of country life by its owners and proprietors. Descended from two of the very oldest families of Decatur county, they not only are among the most prosperous and inlluential people to be found anywhere in the county, but the family is living up to the ideals of the worthy progenitors, who during their day and generation were also leading citizens of the county. Samuel L. Jackson, who was born on February 2, 1846, at Cincinnati, DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 637 Ohio, is the son of William and Amelia (Hillman) Jackson, natives of Vir- ginia and Maryland, respectively, the former of whom was born on October 13, 1797, and who died in 1869, and the latter of whom was born on January 31, 1805, and who died, March 6, 1882. They were married, July 19, 1823. Left an orijhan at a tender age, William Jackson left his southern home, and made his way to Cincinnati, where he arrived in 1831. Here for a time as a protege of Nicholas Longworth I, he worked at the tailor trade and also engaged in teaming. While living in Cincinnati, he met with an accident in which he lost his left leg below the knee. One of his boyhood ambitions having been to own a fann, in 1846 he settled on a tract of land in Fugit township, where he purchased one hundred and sixty acres, and two years later sold it and moved to a farm near Milford. Here he prospered beyond any expectations of his boyhood, and beyond any dreams or fancies of his early life, reaching a position of influence in the community, and passing away, June, 1869, at the age of seventy-two, rich in experience and rich in possessions of this world's goods. Of the thirteen children born to William and Amelia (Hillman) Jackson, only one, Samuel L., the subject of this sketch, and the youngest child of the family, is now living. The children, in the order of their birth, are as follow: Mrs. Sarah Ann (Porter) Alden, born on February 20, 1825; James Henry, April 26, 1827; William Thomas, October 3, 1828; Rebecca Frances, April 9, 1830; Henry Jackson, February II, 1832: Mary Elizabeth, October 3, 1832; Mrs. Christe Ann Woodward, June 30, 1S35; Mrs. Amelia Priscilla Marlow, March 14, 1837; Mrs. Louisa Layton Clark, October 28, 1838: John White, April 7, 1840; Mrs. Mary Hester Porter, March 24, 1842: Henrietta, May 21, 1844, and Samuel Latta, February 2, 1846. That Samuel L. Jackson's progress and prosperity as a farmer are just rewards of his generous and unselfish kindness to a mother and children of a deceased sister, cannot be denied. Educated in the country schools, he lived with his mother until forty years old, and in 1886, the same year his sister, Mrs. Porter, died, he brought his mother and three sons of his departed sister to the farm, two miles west of Greensburg. Later on in the same year, September 9, 1886, Mr. Jackson was married to Mary Hamilton, the daughter of Robert Marshall and Mary (Morgan) Hamilton, who was born on October 8, 1848, and who at the time of their marriage was two years her Imsl.iand's junior. After his marriage. Mr. Jackson moved to the farm owned by Robert Marshall Hamilton, tlie old home place. Robert Marshall Hamilton was born on November 17. 1811, and died 638 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. on August 6. 1901. His wife, wlio, before her marriage, was Alary ]\Iorgan, was born in January, 1811, and ilied, February 3, i8'84. They were married, September 26, 1834. He was the son of Robert Hamilton, who, in turn, was the son of Wilham Hamilton. Robert Marshall Hamilton, who was born in Kentucky, came to Decatur county, Indiana, when twelve years old and lived in Washington township all his life. During his life he erected a large brick house on the Clarksburg turnpike in Washington township, and it is this house which has since been remodeled, until it is now one of the most beautiful and attractive farm homes in Decatur county. Of the five children born to Robert Marshall and ]\Iary (Morgan) Hamilton only three are now living, Charles C. and Gerard are deceased : Thomas Woodson, the eldest child, lives in Greensburg; ]\Irs. Sarah Rankin lives in Washington town- ship; ]\Irs. Samuel L. Jackson is the other living child. A very energetic man, Robert Marshall Hamilton provided well for his family, educated his children and amassed a fortune, owning at the time of his death, thirteen hundred acres of land. First an Al)olitionist, then a Republican and still later a Prohiliitionist, he was a man of pronounced views. It is an interesting fact that his home was an important station of the underground railway, and that he sheltered many runaway slaves during his life, narrowly escaping trouble and damages on several occasions. A member of the Presbyterian church, in the latter part of his life he gave freely of his wealth to various educational institutions, and during his day and generation had. perhaps, more to do with the educational progress of this county than any other man. To Mr. and Mrs. Samuel L. Jackson have been born three children, all of whom are living at hnme with their parents, Robert Hamilton, on January 29, 1889: Louise, November 29, 1892, and Amelia, February 12, 1894. These children attended the district schools and finished their school work in- Purdue University and Oberlin College. All the members of the Jackson family are identified with the Kingston Presbyterian church. Mrs. Jackson is a member of the Independent Club, and her daughters of the Department Chili and of the Kingston Progress Clul). Robert Hamilton, the only SC'U, is a nicmlier of the Knights of Pythias. Mr. Jackson joined the Greensburg Lodge of Odd Fellows No. 103, when twenty-one years of age, and has been a member all his life. Formerly a Republican in politics, he identified himself with the new Progressive party at its formation and has been active in its councils in Decatur county. All the members of the Jackson family are well known and prominent socially in Greensburg and Decatur county. They are among the most hospitable citizens to be found anywhere in the county and well deserve the high social DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 6^^- regard and esteem bestowed upon tliem by the people of this county. Highly educatctl, cultured and refined, the Jackson family has added much to the wholesome communit\- spirit and life of Washington township. THOMAS J. KITCHIN. Like his brother, Guy Kitchin, whose sketch is found elsewhere in this volume, Thomas J. Kitchin is one of the highly respected and influential citizens of l'\igit township, and is deserving of all the good things that come to him in this life. He is a man who attends strictly to his own affairs, and believes in letting others have the same privileges that he recjuires for him- self. He is broad-minded, full of sympathy for those in distress, and is generous in doing his part, when charity calls upon him. Thomas J. Kitchin, of I-'ugit township, was born on September ii, 1890, on the home place, and is a son of Frank Benjamin Kitchin. Thomas J. is a farmer, and is proud of his vocation, in which he takes the utmost interest. His education was obtained, first at the public schools of Kingston, after which he spent two years at the Greensburg high school, and later attended the Central Business College, at Indianapolis. He began farming on August I, 1912, on the one hundred and sixty acres of land belonging to his father, which he has improved with a new dwelling house, and a fine barn. He is a Republican, and a member of the United Presbyterian church at Springhill. Frank Benjamin Kitchin, father of subject, was a native of Decatur county, and lived there all his life, until his removal to Indianapolis. His present address is Indianapolis, where he is in the stock business. Thomas J. Kitchin was married on June 19, 1912, to Miss Lillian Ellen Moore, who was born in Fugit township. She is a daughter of Rufus and Anna (McCracken) Moore. Rufus Moore was born in Covington, Ken- tucky. He now lives in Fugit township. Mrs. Kitchin graduated from the Greenslmrg high schools in 191 1, and attended Monmouth College at Mon- moutli, Illinois, for one year, at the end of which time she was married. Mr. and Mrs. Kitchin are members of the LTnited Presbyterian church, where twelve families meet once a month for the purpose of discussing matters of general interest in the community in which they live. They have one son, John Robert Kitchin, born on April 30, 1913. Rufus San ford Moore was born on January 24, 1866, at Covington,. 640 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Kentucky, and is a son of Joseph \V. and Mary Ann (Stevens) Moore. He was employed, when quite young, in a tin shop at Clarksburg, and later in a bank at Delphi, Indiana. After his marriage, he farmed for fifteen years in Rush county, and then came to Decatur county, and now resides on the McCracken farm. His wife is a daughter of Hugh McCracken, an old resi- dent of Fugit township. They were the parents of the following children: Lillian Ellen (Kitchin), born on February 11, 1891 ; Walter, who is now farming, and Mary Ann, who is at home. JASPER COBB. One of the well-known retired farmers of Decatur county, Indiana, and one of the veterans of our great Ci\il War, is Jasper Cobb, who was born on August 5, 1847, in Washington township on a pioneer farm, and who is the son of Dyar and Elmira (Tremain) Cobb, the former of whom was born on August 6, 1807, died in 1900, and the latter of whom was born in 1810, and who died in 1885. Dyar Cobb was a native of Greensburg, Westmoreland county, Pennsylvania, and the son of Joshua Cobb, of Colonial ancestry and of Welsh descent. In 1818 Joshua Cobb and family came down the Ohio river by boat, and, after remaining for two years in Dearborn county, on account of the dry seasons, came on to Decatur county, where only two houses could be seen from the farm he entered, to which place, in the spring of 1821, he brought his family. Here on the Michigan trail, in Marion township, Joshua Cobb pre-empted land, blazing his way through the forest from Napoleon in Ripley county. He put up a brick shack against a huge poplar log for his first home, and then felled logs and built a cabin. A large and vigorous man, he died in i8f3o. His wife, who was a Miss Crawford before her mar- riage, died in 1864. His eight children, Willard, Dyar, John, Percy, Elke- nah, Mrs. Maria Christy, Helen and Mrs. Martha Terhune, are all deceased, the last named dying in Illinois. When Dyar Cobb attained his majority he cleared a farm on the Alichi- gan road, and there reared his family. The owner of three hundred acres ■of land, he was prominent during his day and generation, but declined offi- cial preferment. He was a member of the Universalist church and a Repub- lican in politics, casting his first vote, however, for the Whig candidates in 1828. Early in life he had learned the brick-ljurning trade, and followed Mil. AND MKS. .TASriOi; COIiH. UKCATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 64I this trade occasionally. Of the twelve children born to Dyar and Elmira (Tremain) Cobb, all but four died in youth or infancy. Mrs. Nancy Hazel- rigg, the eldest, died in 1905. Ainong the other children were : Mrs. O. C. Elder; Mrs. Martha Stewart, of Illinois; John, Nancy, Joshua, Harvey, Mary, Newton and Jasper. At the age of sixteen years, Jasper Cobb enlisted in Company A, One Hundred and Thirty-fourth Regiment, Indiana Volunteer Infantry, in 1864, under Captain Joseph Drake and under Colonel Gavin, serving one hundred and twenty days. He enlisted, however, for only one hundred days. Mr. Cobb eventually came into possession of the old Cobb homestead of three hundred acres, but disposed of two hundred acres of the farm in 1906. He still has one hundred acres left. Until February 14, 1898, he was actively engaged in farming, and then removed to Greensburg. In ]\Iarch, 1873, Jasper Cobb was married to Ann Eliza Montgomery. They had one child, Robert, who died at the age of four and one-half years. Mrs. Cobb, the daughter of John G. H. and Sarah (Shadrick) Montgom- ery, the former of whom was born on August 14, 1819, in Kentucky, a farrrier by occupation, and one who was well educated and a natural genius. Mrs. Montgomery was born on May 8, 1813. In 1849 John G. H. Mont- gomery purchased a small farm, one and one-half miles southeast of Greens- burg, and there established a home, increasing his acreage until he owned live farms. He is now deceased, having passed from this life in 1894. He and his wife reared a family of eight children. Of these children, Nancy Jane was born on November i, 1840, married N. S. Potter, and died on April 8, 1870: Sarah E., January 25, 1842, who married Leonard McCune, died on March 5, 1874; Mary F., in 1844, married J. C. St. John, of Greens- burg: Henry H., in 1846, was a soldier in the One Hundred and Thirty- fourth Regiment, Indiana Volunteer Infantry. He lives in Zirich, Mon- tana; Robert W., in 1848, died in Oregon on October i, 1911; Ann Eliza married Mr. Cobb and is a talented and gracious woman; John Q., Septem- ber 26, 1853, lives in Grants Pass, Oregon; George, in 1854, owns and operates a garage in Greensburg. Of Mrs. Cobb's remote ancestry, it may be said that her great-grand- father, Hugh Montgomery, was born in 1760, in Ireland, and settled in Pennsylvania, and that he and his brother William were soldiers in the Revo- lutionary War. William was lost. A half-brother, George, also disappeared. Hugh Montgomery married Eva Hartman in 1784, a native of Germany. They had thirteen children, among whom were Mary, the wife of Alexan- (41) 642 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. der Ganst; Mrs. Elizabeth Thompson; Thomas; Henry; iMargaret; WilHam; Sallie, and Hugh, Jr.. the grandfather of Mrs. Gobi), who was born on August 29, 1797. While on a visit to Kentucky, he fell in love with a dis- tant cousin, Elizabeth Montgomery, and married her, October 14, 1818. They resided in Shelby county, Kentucky, until 1830, wlicn they came to Indiana, settling two miles north of Greensburg. Here they purchased a farm one mile southeast of Greensburg. The wife died, Decemljer 4, 1859. When Hugh Montgnmery was sixty-six years old he enlisted in the One Hundred and Thirty-fourth Regiment, Indiana Volunteer Infantry, but was refused admission in the army on account of his age. He died. April 22, 1872. His son, John G. H. Montgomery, the father of Mrs. Cobb, who married Sarah Shadrick, died in 1898. Of Mrs. Cobb it may be said that she is a talented woman, and one who is well known in this section for her beautiful poem, the "Old Home- stead." She also is the author of that portion of the Montgomery genealogy which deals especially with the Montgomerys of Decatur county, Indiana. Mr. Cobb is a Republican, a member of the Baptist church and of the_ Inde- pendent Order of Odd Fellows. He is also a member of Pap Thomas Post No. 5, Grand Army of the Republic, at Greensburg, Indiana. Mrs. Cobb is a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution, Lone Tree Chapter, of which she has been active as a charter memljer and she was the second treasurer of the chapter. THOMAS DUFFEY. Not very far from the city of Greensburg, Decatur county, Indiana, and located in Washington township, is a beautiful farm of two hundred and four acres, known as the Prairie VMew farm, and where the passerby may see, sitting well back from the much-traveled thoroughfare, a large frame- barn, of modem construction, and an old-time brick house. Since February 18, ic)io, this has been the home of Mrs. .\nna ( Koors) Duffey and children. The buildings are set well within a wide and spacious lawn with numerous trees to break the monotony of the landscape and to furnish abundant shade during the hot days of an Indiana summer. This farm was purchased by the late Thomas Duffey three years before his death. During his life, Thomas Duffey was one of the best-known farmers and stockmen of Decatur county. He was born on Octol)er 10, 1857, and died, September 2;^, 1907, having almost reached the half century DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 643 mark. His parents, Patrick and Bridget Duffey, natives of Ireland, emi- grated to Decatur county, and settled on a farm, their son being reared here and educated in the schools of Decatur county, especially in the Milhausen neighborhood. At one time Patrick Duffey kept a grocery in Cincinnati, but later removed from Cincinnati to the Milhausen neighborhood, two miles from Milhausen, where the late Thomas Duffey was reared and where he was married. During his lifetime, Thomas Duffey owned several farms. He first purchased a farm of eighty acres in the Milhausen neighborhood, and after living there for eight years, removed to Milhausen and engaged in the live stock business for two years, when he moved to the McCoy farm, where he lived for eight years, finally purchasing the farm. He then bought the Hazel- rigg property, near Greensburg, and lived there from 1898 until 1907, the time of his death. In cultivating his various farms and from the live stock business he was able to save considerable money and was regarded as a very successful man. At the time of his death, the late Thomas Duffey left a widow and six children. His wife, Mrs. Anna (Koors) Duffey, to whom he was mar- ried, February 12, 1884, was born in Cincinnati on March 28, 1862, the daughter of Barney and Anna (Fernerding) Koors, natives of Germany. Mrs. Duffey's father, a coo])er and mill-wright by trade, removed to Decatur county and settled in the Milhausen neighborhood in 1865, farming there for eight years. The mother dfed in 1873, and after her death, her husband operated a mill and a mercantile store in Milhausen, until the mill burned. He kept the store, however, until his death, December 20, 1907, when he was seventy-eight years old. Of the six children left by Thomas Duffey at the time of his death, the Rev. Charles Duffey is the assistant pastor of St. Anthony's parish, at Indianapolis; Bernard, who was born on April 2, 1888, is managing the Prairie View farm; Alfred, October 25, 1890; Hilda, December 6, 1893, '^ at home with her mother; Clarence, Feliruary 12, 1896. died on June 18. 1909; Robert, the youngest child, January 2, igoo. After removing to the Washington township farm in 1910, Mrs. Duffey and her sons erected a magnificent fine barn in 1911, and in 1914 they erected a modern silo. The Prairie View farm is one of the best to be found in Decatur county — the best, not only from the standpoint of its general appear- ance, but from the standpoint of the fertility of the soil. In 1914 the forty acres of corn raised on the farm produced two thousand bushels. Mrs. Duffey and her sons feed and sell seventy to one hundred and fiftv head of hogs every year, and about a carload of cattle. Every bushel of grain raised 644 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. on the farm is fed to live stock, and last year it was necessary to buy one thousand bushels to feed out the stock. One might search the length and breadth of Decatur county and still fail to find young men who are more progressive in their notions and methods of agriculture and more enterprising and thrifty than the sons of the late Thomas Duffey. At the time of his death, he was a member of the St. Mary's Catholic church, and Greensburg Council No. 1652, Knights of Columbus. In fact, the Duffey family are all members of the Catholic church, and loyal and devout in this faith. With earnest purpose and a sense of the responsibility, Mrs. Duffey and her children have taken up and carried forward the work of the deceased husband and father, a man who, by his industry, energy and good manage- ment, was able to provide well for his widow and children. A man of most loving disposition, his memory is revered not only by the members of his immediate family, but by those who knew him as a successful farmer and stockman, and by those who had any relations with him in a business or social way. His passing was a distinct loss to the citizenship of this county. THOMAS H. STEVENSON. The late Thomas H. Stevenson, who was well known as a business man in Decatur county, Indiana, and who was a leader in the political circles of this county, was a man who, as far as he was able to do so, lived by the Golden Rule. The late Thomas H. Stevenson was born on August 11, 1854, the son of Thomas and Eliza (Abrams) Stevenson, and died on December 16, 1914. His father, the son of Scottish parents, lived and died in Dearborn county. In 1871 Thomas H. came to Greensburg as deputy internal revenue col- lector under the late Will Cumback, and held this position for eleven years, or until 1882, when he resigned to enter the produce commission business in Cincinnati with Gilette Stevenson, who was a former revenue collector. After being in Cincinnati for three years, he returned to Greensburg in 1885 and took charge of the Emmert Flouring Mill, relieving his father- in-law, the late John Emmert, whosej health had failed. After being in charge of this mill until it changed owners, he engaged in the brokerage business, his own health having failed. In this latter business he was very successful and at this time his widow and son own the old W'ooley farm in Decatur county, a farm which consists of one hundred and sixty acres of well-improved and highly producti-\'e land. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 645 On January 13, 1879, Thomas H. Stevenson was married to Elizabeth Emmert, who was born on July 10, 1855, in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, and who is the daughter of John and Catherine (Seitz) Emmert, natives of Mannheim, Germany, and Alsace-Lorraine, respectively. There were three eventful years in the career of John Emmert. In 1845 he came to America with his parents and located at Trenton, New Jersey, and eight years later, in 1853, he located in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, where he married Catherine Seitz and thirteen years later, in 1866, he moved to Greensburg, Indiana, where most of his fortune was acquired. During his life at Greensburg, he built and operated the Garland mills. He was an excellent miller and understood not only the business phase of mill- ing, but the technical and manufacturing end as well. A Democrat in poli- tics and for some time a councilman in Greensburg, John Emmert was an influential man in Decatur county, public-spirited', progressive, industrious and, in his later life, very wealthy. He was also prominent as a member of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows. Catherine Seitz had come to America with her parents when four years old in 1838, when they first located at Hamilton, Ohio, but her father, Christopher Seitz, later moved to Dearborn county, where he became a farmer. John Emmert died in 1882, his wife surviving him many years and passing away in 1909. To Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Stevenson was born one son, Emmert C, who was born on May 21, 1891, and who was educated in the Greens- burg public schools, the Greensburg high school and Purdue University at Lafayette. After graduating from the electrical engineering department of Purdue University, he returned to his home in Decatur county and is now manager of the home farm. During his entire life, Mr. Stevenson was more or less actively identified with Republican politics in Decatur county and the fourth congressional dis- trict. During very late years, however, he was inclined toward the new Progressive party. In this section of the state, he was known as a far- seeing political leader and manager, although he personally never sought ofiice, but he looked after the interest of his party in this section of the state and it was well known by state leaders that his pledges of support and promises of services could be depended upon absolutely. A member of the Greensburg lodge of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, he was very prominent in this organization, and if any man who has lived in Decatur county within recent years has followed the Golden Rule as a model for the relationship of life, it was the late Thomas H. Stevenson. 646 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. JAMES A. MYERS. Of the many magnificent farms to be found on the widely traveled highway, a few miles southwest of Greensburg, is one of eighty acres owned by James A. Myers, one of the well-known farmers of Washington township. James A. Myers, who was born on July 22, 1847, o" Sand creek, in a log cabin in the wilderness, is the son of William H. and Elizabeth M. (Annie) Myers, the former of whom was born on August 6, 1824, and who died, August 8, 1904, and the latter of whom was born on June 29, 1827, died May i, 1900. Born in Kentucky, the late William H. Myers was a son of George and Margaret (Harmon) Myers, also natives of Kentucky, the former, who came to Decatur county about 1832, took up a tract of timber land on Sand Creek, and there cleared a place for a house and established a home. He died at the age of eighty-nine years. Reared in a pioneer settle- ment, the late William H. Myers lived with his father for many years after his marriage. In 1857 he sold the farm situated on Sand Creek and pur- chased the farm now known as the Davis homestead, near Horace, where he lived for several years, eventually selling out and removing to Kansas, where he lived for fifteen years. At the end of this period he returned to Decatur county and there died. William H. and Elizabeth (Annis) Myers had ten children, two of whom are deceased. Of their children, James A. is the subject of this sketch; George M. lives in Sand Creek township; John Thomas, born on October 21, 1851, lives in Clay township, Decatur county; William R., July 24, 1854, died in infancy; Mrs. Alice B. Sanderson, July 21, 1857, died on September II, 1897, near Forest Hill; Eliza L., February 21, 1859, lives in W^ebb City, Missouri: Harvey M., October 18, 1861 ; Merritt E., November 25, 1864, lives in Oklahoma; Mrs. Ida M. Johnson, September 11, 1867, lives in Indianapo- lis, as does her sister, Mrs. Nancy N. Berry, born on September 26, 1871. Starting out in life for himself at the age of twenty-one, James A. Myers was married, October 21, 1868, to Martha E. Wynkoop, daughter of James and Barbara (Hedrick) Wynkoop, of Sand Creek township. Mrs. Myers was born on July 24, 1848, near Laurel, in Franklin county, Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. Myers" have had two children, Jennie F., who was born on November 3, 1869, married William N. Gartin, the son of Zack Gartin, October 22, 1899, and Eftie B., October 31, 1877, married Nomian Eubanks, of Greensburg, and they have one child, Gilbert Dale, aged nineteen. Mr. and Mrs. Myers owned thirty-five acres of land in Clay township, DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 647 where they hved until April, 1869 (after their marriage), when they removed to Sand Creek township and there lived until 1903. At that time they sold out and purchased a farm near Greensburg, comprising eighty acres of land, where they have now lived for twelve years. A Democrat in politics, Mr. Myers comes from a long line of ancestors who have been prominent Democrats in the respective communities where they have lived. Although a Democrat in national and perhaps state politics, Mr. Myers is not a hide-bound partisan and votes independently in local affairs. He served two terms as justice of the peace of Sand Creek town- ship. Mr. and Mrs. Myers are members of the Baptist church at Liberty. They are active workers in church affairs. Here in the neighborhood where they have lived these many years, they are highly respected citizens, honored for their quiet and unassuming manners, for their native intelligence and sympathic interest in the welfare of the community as a whole. Mr. Myers is a man of stei-ling integerity, scrupulous in all the dealings of life, and well known in different parts of Decatur county. FRANK C. STOUT. In selecting his life work, Frank C. Stout chose something that would give pleasure to his friends, as well as to himself. He might have had in mind, also, the fact that music, more than any other factor in life, has a charm, toned with sweetness, harmony and rhythm to a degree understood by everyone, an'd to a great measure helpful and uplifting not only to the toiler but to the artist as well. While the traditional writer has said that "music hath charms to soothe the savage breast," it might have added, "and draw all men together in a state of peace and happiness." However, the success with which Mr. Stout has met, is sufficient proof of his efficiency as a piano tuner, and his ability as a musician, a combination which has brought him in good returns. Frank C. Stout, piano dealer and tuner, of Greensburg, Indiana, was born in that city, in June, 1878, the son of Wiley J. Stout. Subject was reared and educated in the public schools of Greensburg. In young manhood he studied medicine, thinking to follow that profession, but his artistic nature outweighed this desire and, about 1905, he began tuning pianos, and later opened salesrooms in Greensburg, where he handles a fine line of the French & Sons and Busch & Geits pianos, in which he does a thriving business. His store is one of the most attractive of its kind in the city. II 648 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Wiley J. Stout was born in Decatur county and died about 1895. He was a son of Harvey P. Stout (see Stout genealogy in the sketch of John F. Robbins, elsewhere in this volume). At an early age, Wiley J. Stout learned the carpenter trade, in which he became very skillful, and at which he worked all his life. He was united in marriage to Octavia Lloyd, who is also deceased. Frank C. Stout is their only child now living. He is a strong advocate of the principles of the Progressive party, is an exceptional musician, and is especially proficient on the piano. His host of admiring friends, who have done their part in aiding him to build up his business, speaks well for his popularity. JAMES CARTER McLAUGHLIN. The offspring of a pioneer family of Decatur county, Indiana, the late James Carter McLaughlin, a veteran of the Civil War and a well-known farmer and stockman of this county during his life, gained almost national fame as a breeder of trotting horses which were especially well known throughout the state of Indiana. Not only was he a successful farmer and stockman, but he was well known as a citizen and puljlic-spirited man of affairs. He lived to rear a large family of children, who were given the very best educational advantages and who, now that he is gone, revere the memory of a loving and kind father. The late James Carter McLaughlin, proprietor of Ash Grove stock farm in Washington township, Decatur county, Indiana, and later of the old homestead farm of three hundred acres, was born on January 27, 183 1, in Decatur county, and passed away, January 4, 1894, the son of George and Sarah (Carter) McLaughlin, who were born and married in Mason county, Kentucky, and who, after their marriage, in 1827, came the same year to Decatur county, where they entered government land. George and Sarah (Carter) McLaughlin, the former of whom was an intelligent and highly respected citizen, progressive in spirit and successful in business, were the parents of eight children, only four of whom grew to maturity. Of these children, James C. is the subject of this sketch; Mary Frances, deceased, was born on February i, 1829, and married Zachariah T. Riley, April 13, 1853; Elizabeth Ann was the wife of Thomas M. Hamilton, deceased, who now lives on North East street, Greensburg, Indiana, and Casper Wooster died in the state of California. The father of these children was an ardent Republican during his life. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 649 He spent his declining years at the home of his son, the late J. C. McLaugh- lin. The father was born on Septemljer 24, 1802, and died, October 29, 1885. His wife, Sarah (Carter) McLaughlin, was born on August 18, 1804, and died July 20, 1873. They were married, April 10, 1827. After living at home on his father's farm and performing the work ordinarily falling to the lot of the average country boy during the earlier years of the history of this count)^ James Carter McLaughlin enlisted in 1861 in the Wilder battery, later the Independent battery, and served four years as a soldier in the Civil War. At the siege of Knoxville he was taken seriously ill and was unable to serve for some time. He was in many battles arid sieges, including those at Somerset, Kentucky, and Harpers Ferry, where the battery was captured. James C. was later exchanged at India- napolis. Afterward the battery saw active service in Kentucky and Tennes- see, and was on the firing line until the close of the war. 'Immediately after the close of the Civil War, Mr. McLaughlin was married, March 14, 1866, to Louisa Davidson, who was born on December 25, 1839, in Decatur county, Indiana, and who is the daughter of Isaac and Jennie (Miller) Davidson, natives of Nicholas county, Kentucky, and Mon- roe county, Virginia, respectively. Isaac Davidson, who was born in 1802, and who died in July, 1855, came to Decatur county, Indiana, when a young man, and worked for seven and one-half dollars a month. Coming here in 1827, he eventually owned a fine farm in Clinton township. Mrs. Jennie (Miller) Davidson, who was born in 1809, and who died in 1905, at the age of ninety-six years, was the daughter of John Miller, who came to Decatur county in 1814, and after settling near Clarksburg, was engaged in burning brick. He had come down the river on a flat-boat, and at the time he passed Cincinnati, it was a mere hamlet. His nearest neighbors at the time were seven miles away. Indians were very numerous in the country. At this time his daughter, Jennie Miller, was only five years old, and she had accom- panied him to this county. Isaac and Jennie (^Miller) Davidson had eight children, Mary, who married Sol Sharp, died in i860; John, in 1833, resides on a farm near Hartville, Kansas: Elizabeth, who was born in 1835, became the wife of Henry Bird, deceased, and resides on Hendricks street, Greensburg ; Mar- garet, in 1837, married Thomas Draper, wlio died in 1910, in Kansas; Louise, the widow of the late James Carter McLaughlin ; Jane, February 2, 1841, always lived with her mother on Walnut street: Rhoda died at the age of twelve years, and Taylor died in his youth. To Mr. and I\Irs. Tames Carter McLaughlin six children were born, all ■650 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. of whom are living, except one, Mary, who died at the age of thirty-eight years. The names of the children are as follow: Blanche, Orion D., Mary, Delia, James Barton and Frances. Of these children, Blanche, a graduate of Indiana State University, lives on Lincoln street, Greensburg, Indiana ; Orion D., a farmer, resides on East street. He owns three hundred and twenty acres of land; Delia, a graduate of Purdue University, is the wife of W. H. Silver. They live at West Newton ; James Barton, who lives on the old homestead, is a graduate of Purdue University, and married Margaret Mil- ler. Thev have two children, James C. and William Graham ; and F" ranees, a graduate of Purdue University, is the wife of S. W. Shirk, a well-known farmer of this county. James Carter McLaughlin was a Republican, although he never took much interest in political affairs, while his good wife during her actix'e life, was a devoted member of the Methodist Episcopal church. As an enterprising man of business, a fanner and breeder, James Carter McLaughlin contributed materially to the progress and prosperity of Decatur county. He was a man necessarily of large vision, who could foresee large opportunities,' and he possessed the executive skill, the capacity for details to carry out preconceived plans. He was the very soul of honor, loving and kind in the home, cordial and genial in all the relations of life, private or public. WILLIAM SMILEY. Among the early settlers of pioneer days, in the second decade of the nineteenth century, with but few ad\-antages, a sturdy native of the Key- stone state, whose ambition was to cut out of the concrete of life something more than a mere pittance and who, like many another lad, had but a few hundred dollars with which to make a start, drinking at the fountain of perspective, was William Smiley, a man of unusual thrift, whose unflagging courage and persistence led him through the many vicissitudes of life to a field of prosperity and plenty. With an ambition to see that his posterity were well provided for, he was a man of keen perception, wrought out of the fact, no doubt, that he was self-educated, broad-minded and a man of sound judgment. It is pleasing, indeed, under all conditions in life to see any of the younger generations forge to the front, and even more so when the freshness of youth knows no failure and recognizes no defeat. As :such an one, it is a pleasure to point to the life-work of William Smiley DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 65 1 with a sense of pride, as a man having utihzed the opportunities as they came to him, molding them into a great success. Wilham Smiley, was born in February, 1814, and migrated with his parents from Penns3'lvania to Butler county, Ohio, where they settled on a farm on which he grew to manhood. He was married in Butler county and, in the year 1849, came to this county, locating on a farm in Clay town- ship. He became very prosperous, in time coming to own hundreds of acres of choice land in this county. Beginning life in Decatur county with a few hundred dollars as his capital, he managed his affairs so wisely and so prudently that he became one of the wealthiest men in tne county. To each of his children he gave farms, in addition to which his daughters received nice sums of money upon reaching eighteen years of age. Despite the fact that he continued giving away his property, he left an estate of about sixty thousand dollars, an evidence of his ability as a financier. Mr. Smiley had few advantages in his youth and was a self-educated man, ac- quiring, by close observation and the constant exercise of his remarjvable native talents, a fine general knowledge. He was an uncompromising Demo- crat and ever took an interest in the county's political affairs, long Ijeing recognized as one of the most active workers in his party in this county, a veritable "wheel-horse," in fact; his sound judgment and keen common sense giving large weight to his counsels in the deliberations of the party managers in Decatur county. He was a splendid horseman and it is still recalled that, on gala occasions, it was his wont to turn out, driving ten or a dozen horses in a team. In his later years he left the farm and moved to Greensburg, where his last days were passed in comfortable retirement, his death occurring on June 30, 1893, his widow surviving until July 8, 1896. To William and Mary A. (Kenny) Smiley were born ten children, as follow: Mrs. Permelia Henry, deceased; Mrs. Caroline Sefton, widow of Edward B. Sefton, of Greensburg; George W. and James M. (twins), the former of whom died in 1907, and the latter of whom died in infancy; Har- vey K., who died in January, 191 5; Thomas K., a well-known farmer of Clay township, this county; William F.. who resided in Greensburg; Mary, who died on August 17, 1914; S. P., who lives at El Campo (Texas) Hotel, and Margaret, widow of William A. Johnston. Mrs. Margaret L. Johnston was born on a farm in Clay township, Decatur county, Indiana, on January 18, 1857, the daughter of William and Mary A. (Kennedy) Smiley, pioneers of this county, the former of whom was a native of Pennsvlvania and the latter a native of New Tersev. 652 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Upon her marriage to William A. Johnston in 1877, ^Mrs. Johnston moved from the paternal farm to Greensburg, where she ever since has made her home. Mr. Johnston was born in the town of Franklin, Johnson county, Indiana, on February i, 1854, and died in February, 1907. To Mr. and Mrs. Johnston three children were born, Cora S., at home; Walter married Elizabeth Bates in 1910 and lives at Greensburg; and Raymond K., ste- nographer with the Big Four Railroad Company at Indianapolis. Mrs. Johnston is held in the highest esteem in the social circles of Greensburg and is deeply interested in the general welfare of the entire community. She formerly was an active member of several local clubs. NELSON M. TEMPLETON. Nelson M. Templeton, a retired citizen of Greensburg, Indiana, and one ti the prominent and well-known men of Decatur county, was born on October 22, 1845, on a farm in Franklin county, the son of John and Eliza- beth (Barnard) Templeton, natives of Pennsylvania, the former of whom died in September, 1899, and the latter of whom the daughter of David Barnard, of Pennsylvania, died on August 20, 1896. John Templeton was an early resident of Franklin county, the son of David Templeton, a pio- neer settler of southeastern Indiana. The Templetons built a cabin on the east fork of the White Water, in Franklin county, or on Templeton's creek. In 1865 the family settled in Washington township, Decatur county, and here owned a good farm, comprising three hundred acres of well-improved land, located two miles south of Greensburg, which is known to this day as the Templeton farm, where both parents died. John Templeton was a Re- puljlican and was a member of the Methodist Episcopal church. Of the eight children born to John and Elizabeth (Barnard) Templeton, two are now deceased; Catherine is the wife of George Fiscus and resides one and one-half miles south of Greensburg, Decatur county ; Nelson M. is the sub- ject of this sketch; James W^., who was born on December 22, 1847, died on May i, 1901, at the age of fifty-two years, and had married Frances Stout, daughter of Joab and Rebecca Stout, who bore him the following chil- dren. Flora, Ella, Grace, Harry and Elizabeth ; Robert and Edward were twins, the former of whom is deceased, and the latter resides south of Greensburg; Laura is the widow of Griffith Gartin, deceased; John lives DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. '653 west of Greensburg in the Emington neighborhood, and OHver married Ida Taylor, and is the proprietor of a machine shop. Upon leaving home at the age of twenty-seven years, Nelson M. Tem- pleton farmed near Adams for three years, and in 1875 moved to Letts Corner and purchased a farm, where he lived for ten years. Not liking this place, however, in 1885 he moved to Lebanon in Boone county, and pur- chased a partnership in a planing mill and builders' supply firm. In Sep- tember of the next year, he returned to St. Paul and from there moved to Clifty, or Mil ford, and from Clifty to Franklin, Johnson county, where he remained for six years, during which time he was engaged in the car- penter trade. After his mother's death he removed to the old place, where he lived for three years, and rented a farm east of Greensburg for three years, subsequently removing to that city. During one and one-half years' residence in Greensburg, he purchased a part of the home estate of eighty-one acres, erected a house and barn, and moved his family to the farm. In 1909 he sold out and moved back to Greensburg. On November 21, 1873, Nelson M. Templeton was married to Rachel Stark, who was born on November 4, 1S52, in Decatur county. Indiana, and who is the daughter of Aden Boone and Eliza (Wallace) Stark, natives of Oldenburg, Kentucky, and Rockbridge county, Virginia, respectively. The former was the son of Caleb Stark, who married Anna Boone, a cousin of Daniel Boone. Caleb Stark, in fact, was a follower of Daniel Boone, and the son of Capt. John Stark, a soldier in the Revolutionary army. Caleb Stark was a member of the Decatur county board of commissioners when the court house was built. A number of the famous characters in the "Hoosier Schoolmaster" were modeled on members of Caleb Stark's family. Aden Boone Stark, who was born on October 21, 181 5, in Olden county, Kentucky, moved with his father to Decatur county in 1825. He was married to Eliza Wallace, September 7, 1837, and by her had nine chil- dren, among whom are the following: Percis Jane, deceased, who was the wife of Joseph Braden; John Caleb, of Clifty, Decatur county; Mary Ann, the wife of Cyrus Moore, of Clifty; Hannah Elizabeth, deceased; Charles, deceased; Mrs. Rachel Templeton; William, a farmer in Bartholomew county; and two children who died in infancy. Aden Boone Stark died on April 19, 1890. In this connection it is worth while to mention the fact that five of the eleven children born to Caleb Stark were natives of Ken- tucky, their names being Aden. George, Willett, Percis and Lovina. Mr. and Mrs. Nelson I\I. Templeton are members of the Baptist church. He is identified with the Republican party. A man well known in this sec- 654 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. tion, he is highly honored and respected by all who have come in contact with him, and especially his fellow townsmen in the city of Greensburg. Nelson M. Templeton and wife have two children, Nellie, at home; and Perry William, a decorator at Indianapolis, who married Alargaret Erharclt, and they have two children, Howard and Elizabeth. i JAMES PORTER. Not many families in Uecatur cuunty ha\e created a more distinct impression upon its affairs than has the well-known Porter family. This family has been represented in Decatur county since the early days of the settlement of this section of the state and where\-er its members have been found, there they have been doing well those things toward which their energies were being directed. In the agricultural life, the industrial life, the religious life and the professional life of the community they have been active, the family having produced several notable leaders in these several departments of human endeavor. Prc.nninent in good works, faithful in whatever serxice they were called upon to perform, either in public or private stations, the Porters ha\e accjuitted themselves in such fashion as to merit the continued confidence and esteem of the entire community, and it is a pleasure on the part of the biographer to bring to the attention of the reader at this point something regarding the l^eginnings of this family in Decatur county. Eor further, details relatmg to the family, the reader is respectively referred to brief biographical sketches of the careers of Ale.x- ander Porter, the well-known contractor, and Dr. Edward A. Porter, broth- ers of the subject of this sketch, presented elsewhere in this volume. James Porter was born on the farm on which he still is li\ing, three and one-half miles southwest of the citv of Greensburg, in Washington township, Decatur county, Indiana, on ^larch 7, 1871, a son of Matthew E. and Clarissa (McKinney) Porter, both members of pioneer families of this county. Matthew E. Porter was born in the year 1836, his birth occurring in a log cabin which still is standing on the east half of the farm now owned I)y James Porter. He was the only son of Alexander and Elizabeth (Elder) Porter, the latter of whom was a daughter of the venerated Rev. Nathan Elder, a pioneer minister of the P>aptist faith who e.xerted so strong an influence for good in pioneer days in this section of the state. Rev. Nathan Elder, a nati\e of Kentucky, was a "circuit rider" of the old DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 655 school and his ministrations were extended far and near tliroughout this section of Indiana. He built the first church in Union county, Indiana, and for many years preached the gospel with a devotion that made his name and his works widely known. Alexander Porter was born in Dearborn county, Indiana, in 1799, the son of a Virginian, who, with his wife, penetrated the wilderness of Indiana Territory in an early day in the settlement of this section of the same. Upon reaching manhood's estate, Alexander Porter married Elizabeth Elder, who was born in Kentucky in 1813, and the pioneer couple went to housekeeping in the log cabin in which Alexander Porter was born, moving to this county in the year 1830 and establising a new home in the then wilderness of Washington township. To this couple but two children were born, Matthew E. and a girl child, the latter of whom died at the tender age of four years. i\Iatthew E. Porter succeeded to the home farm and lived there all his life, durmg which time he made but one change in residence, that being when he moved from the original eighty acres entered by his father to the west half of what now constitutes the fine Porter farm of two hundred and fifty- seven acres, owned jointly by James, Alexander -and William R., grandsons of the original entrant. This move was made in 1892 and Matthew Porter died in 1908. Matthew Porter was an industrious and progressive farmer and was quite successful in his operations, at his death lea\'ing a fine estate, wholly unencumbered. He and his wife were the parents of the following children : Martha A., who married John McConnell and lives six miles smith of Greensburg: Alexander, of Greensliurg, member of the well-known firm of Pulse & Porter, building contractors, further mention of whom is made in this volume; John, deceased; William R., of the firm of Pulse & Porter, who has charge of that firm's extensi\'e plant at Hope, Indiana; Elizabeth, deceased; James, the immediate subject of this sketch; Andrew, who is li\ing retired in the city of Greensliurg, this county; Barton, who died just as he was entering upon what gave promise of being a singularly successful career as a lawyer, and Dr. Edward A., the well-known and popular physician, of Bumey, this county, a biographical sketch of whom is presented elsewhere in this volume. James Porter was reared on the home farm and has made the same his home all his life. He is a progressive farmer, having early discovered the value of adopting up-to-date methods in the operation of his extensive farm- ing interests, and has prospered; now being recognized as one of the most substantial farmers in the cnuntv. His farm, which formerlv was covered 656 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. with liard timber, walnut and maple predominating, is gently rolling and is under excellent cultivation. Mr. Porter gives much attention to the rais- ing of fine hogs and in this branch of agriculture has been quite successful, his hogs ever bringing "the top of the market." On Jul}' 20. 1899, James Porter was united in marriage to Mary L. Woodward, daughter of Isaac L. and Christina (Jackson) W'oodward, mem- bers of prominent pioneer families of this county, and to this union two children have been born, Raymond G., who was born in 1903, and James I\x'r, who died in infancy. Mr. Porter is a Democrat and takes such part in the political affairs of the county as is becoming in all good citizens, but never has been included in the ofifice-seeking class, preferring to devote his time and his talents to his own extensive farming interests, rather than to the public service. He is a member of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows and is warmly inter- ested in the affairs of his home lodge. He and Mrs. Porter are prominent in the good works of their neighborhood and are held in the highest regard bv all who know them. FRANK HAMILTON. For nearly a century the Hamilton family have been prominent in the civic and political life of Decatur county. The founder of the family in this county was Cyrus Hamilton, who was bom in Kentucky, July 4, 1800, and who was married, February 22, 1822, to Mary McCoy, having come to this county immediately after his marriage, and in this early day having become one of the prominent advocates of temperance and an opponent of slavery. Cyrus Hamilton was a prominent man in his day. Long before the issue of slaver}' was fought out on the bloody battlefields of the Civil War, he main- tained a station of the "underground railroad" at his Decatur county home, and assisted scores of slaves to escape north from their southern masters. Of Scotch-Irish descent, he inherited all the sturdy traits of this racial com- bination, and, 'although he never held office, he was prominent as a debater of public questions, well read and well informed, as well as being very popu- lar. During his lite he was a member of the Sand Creek Presbyterian church and influential in that organization. Frank Hamilton, a well-known attorney of Greensburg, Indiana, and member of the firm of Osborn & Hamilton, who was born on April 2, 1883, in Fugit township, Decatur county, Indiana, is the grandson of the well- |HH ^^^^^^^^J ^^^^^^^^^H ^^^^B / ^^^^1 ^B^#^ l^^l ^^^k' \^^^^^| ^^^■: ^ ^ '^^^^^1 ^^^^^^K ▲.^ ^^^^^^^^.-1 3^^H smaa^mimm. FRANK HAMILTON. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 657 known Cyrus Hamilton and the son of Everett Hamilton, the youngest son of Cyrus Hamilton's family. Everett, who was born on October i6, 1841, and who received an excellent education in the Hartville (Indiana) schools and in Butler College at Indianapolis, at one time owned a fine farm of three hundred and sixty acres in Decatur county. He sold it some years ago and is now living retired in Greensburg. On November 10, 1870, he was mar- ried to Mary J. Hopkins, daughter of Preston E. Hopkins, of Fugit town- ship, by which marriage there were three sons born. Paul, the eldest son, was born on October 5, 1871, and is engineer of track and roadway for the Big Four railroad system and is stationed at Cincinnati; Edwin S., the sec- ond son, who was born on August 23, 1873, lives on the home farm in Fugit township ; Frank is the youngest member of the family. Everett Ham- ilton, the father of these children, has also been prominent as a citizen and farmer in Decatur county, having served as trustee of Fugit township at one time and having for many years been a prominent and influential member of the Kingston Presbyterian church. Reared on the Fugit township fann and educated in its common schools and later in the Clarksburg high school, where he spent three years, Frank Hamilton no doubt inherited from his father and his grandfather his strong tendency for a professional career. Although neither the father nor the grandfather may be said to have been professional men, yet in their rela- tions of life they exhibited a marked tendency in this direction. Having left the Clarksburg high school after spending three years there, Mr. Hamilton pursued his education in Butler College at Indianapolis, where his father had attended school, and later spent three years in Indiana University in Bloom- ington, Indiana. During the first year he was a student in the literary department of the university, and during the succeeding two years was a student in the law department. Later, however, he was graduated from the Indiana Law School at Indianapolis, with the class of 1905, and immediately began the practice of his profession in Greensburg. Lfpon receiving his degree from the Indiana Law School, Mr. Hamil- ton spent a year in the law office of Tackett & Wilson, and from 1907 to 1912 was engaged in the practice of law with Judge James K. Ewing, the senior member of the firm of Ewing & Hamilton. In 1912 he became a member of the firm of Osborn, Hamilton & Harding. Later, however, Mr. Harding withdrew from the firm and for two years Mr. Hamilton has been associated with Mr. Osborn under the firm name of Osborn & Hamilton. Having been appointed deputy prosecuting attorney under the administra- (42) 658 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. tion of Prosecutor Albert W. Phillips, of Columbus, Indiana, in 1907, for two years he had charge of all of the work of the prosecutor's office in Decatur county. In 191 2 he became county attorney. Within a short time after establishing himself at Greensburg in the practice of law, Mr. Hamilton was married to Mary F. Isgrigg, of Greens- burg, daughter of W. H. Isgrigg. The marriage took place, December 14, 1907. One son, William Everett, who was born on January 24, 1909, is the fruit of this marriage. A Republican in politics, Mr. Hamilton has been prominent in the coun- cils of the party in Decatur county for many years. During 1910 and 1912 he was secretary of the Decatur County Republican Central Committee. Fra- ternally, he is a member of Clarksburg Lodge No. 124, Free and Accepted Masons, and is past chancellor commander of Greensburg Lodge No. 148, Knights of Pythias. He is also a member of the Grand Lodge of Indiana, deputy grand chancellor, for the fifteenth district, during 1913 and 1914: past exalted ruler of Greensburg Lodge No. 475, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks, and a member of the Grand Lodge of Elks. It must be remembered that Frank Hamilton is a comparatively young man, that he has no more than just begun his career as an attorney in Decatur county. Nevertheless, he is today well established in his profession and his firm enjoys a lucrative practice in this county, a condition for which Mr. Hamilton himself is in no small way responsible. He is not only learned in the law, a wise counselor and a successful practitioner in court, but he is a man of engaging personality and extremely popular in this county. 1 I ADAM MEEK. While an investment in land does not pay the largest returns upon the money invested, it is, however, the safest investment which any man can make, and while few of the great fortunes have been made from farming, when one considers the risk entailed in speculative financial adventures, the soil remains as the ever present inducement to those who are satisfied with reasonable profit. Industrial and financial stocks may rise or fall in value, but the price of land in this country, generally speaking, has fluctuated in only one direction. Its value has constantly increased from the time our forefathers digged out the first stump and plowed the first furrow to the present period with no appreciable exception. It is refreshing to know that DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 659 a considerable number of our citizens are willing to give the weight of their genius to the cultivation of the land and to accept the normal and steady profits which the ownership insures. Adam Meek, who began life with a tract of one hundred and sixty acres of land, started in life by making fanning his vocation, and has ever since been engaged in it. He now owns a magnificent farm of three hundred and seventy-five acres, all in one tract, and has devoted his life energy toward increasing its production to the maxi- mum point. He is not only one of the most capable farmers of Decatur county, but he is one of its best citizens. Adam Meek was born on August 30, 1850, in Clinton township, Decatur county, Indiana, the son of John and Jane (Montgomery) Meek. John Meek, a well-known farmer and capitalist of Decatur county, of a past generation, was born in 1826, and passed away in 1908, at the age of eighty-two, after having lived in this county practically all his life. His wife, who before her marriage was Jane Montgomery, was boni in 1827 in Decatur county, and died in 1892. They had ten children, one of whom, the youngest, Lola Frances, is now deceased. In the order of their birth the children are as follow: Robert S., of Greensburg; Margaret, the wife of J. B. Robinson, of Greensburg; John T., of Greensburg; Martha Louise, the wife of Capt. John A. Meek, of Kansas; Adam, the subject of this sketch; Jethro C., of Greensburg; Mary, the wife of A. C. Brown, of Rush- ville; Theresa Lavina, the widow of Robert Tunis, deceased, lived in Rush county, Indiana, and Mrs. Anna Pleak, of Greensburg. John T. Meek and wife spent a considerable part of their life in Rush county. Reared on a farm in Clinton township, the first recollection of Adam Meek dates back to the time when he was twelve years old and when he was engaged with his father in breaking up and plowing a new clearing. He was taken to the clearing by his father and shown by him how to hold the handles of the plow. In the meantime he was attending school at the old Foster subscription school about six months in every year. At the age of twenty-seven years he removed to a farm of one hundred and sixty acres in Clinton township, which his father had given to him and which was already improved. Additional improvements, however, were made, including the erection of a house, barn and other outbuildings. Here Adam Meek resided for fifteen years, and in 1892 removed to Greensburg, where he has since lived, and from which place he has liieen engaged in directing the cultiva- tion of the farm. Mr. Meek has always raised a large amount of live stock, including about one hundred head of hogs every year. On November 2-j, 1878, Adam Meek was married to Adelaide Patton, 66o DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. the daughter of Nathaniel and EHzabeth (Duncan) Patten, and who was born on December 21, 1849, in Washington township, Decatur county, Indi- ana. To this marriage has been born one child, Clifford Patton Meek, May I, 1882. He was married, October 18, 1904, to Ethel Braden, daugh- ter of Jeremy Braden, and she has been the mother of two children, Harold, born on July 8, 1906, and Majorie, on February 11, 1909. Clifford Patton was educated in Greensburg high school. He was in the hardware business for about ten years in Greensburg, but is now a traveling salesman. Mrs. Adam Meek's father, Nathaniel P'atton H, was born on April 9, 1810, in Adams county, Ohio, and was married, j\lay 21, 1835, to Eliza- beth W. Duncan, who was born on April 2, 1813, and who died, January 10, 1894. Nathaniel Patton H, died, November 24, 1888. He and his wife had nine children, William C, whose life history is recounted elsewhere in this volume; John S., who was born on October 23, 1838, died on Septem- ber 29, 1840; Mary E., September 18, 1840, was married, September 18, i860, to Alexander M. Stuart; he died on July 2, 1866, and Mrs. Stuart now lives in Greensburg; Eska J., April 5, 1842, married, January 26, 1864, to Robert S. Meek, who died on February 16, 1879; Melissa Ann, July 26, 1844, married, June 18, 1895, to Robert S. Meek, after the death of her sister, Mr. Meek's first wife; Martha E., August 8, 1846, married, Septem- ber I, 1868, to Chalmers McDill, who died on July 16, 1879; Mrs. McDill lives in Indianapolis; Adelaide, December 21, 1849, the wife of Adam Meek, the subject of this sketch. Nathaniel Patton II, the father of Mrs. Adam Meek, was the son of Nathaniel Patton I, who was born on February 22, 1776. and who was mar- ried, August 3, 1797, to Polly Robinson, of Rockbridge county, Virginia. She was born on March 10, 1775, and died on January 5, 1847. He died on July 3, 1844, and both are buried at Springhill, in Decatur county. The other members of the family of Nathaniel Patton I, and Polly (Robinson) Patton, were John S., Peggy, James R., Patsy, William, Polly, Nancy, J., Eliza, Samuel W., Rebecca B. and Mary A. The father of Nathaniel Patton I was John Patton, an emigrant from the north of Ireland. He married Martha Sharp (or Steele), the daughter of a Presbyterian minister from Glasgow, Scotland. Nathaniel Patton I, left Virginia in 1806, and emigrated to Adams county, Ohio, settling there in the early twenties. About 18 14 he removed to Rush county, Indiana, not far from Springhill, and died in 1844. The founder of the Patton family in America, John Patton, is believed to have been born about 1754. He had eight brothers. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 66l Mr. and Mrs. Adam Meek are a genial and companionable couple, who have always enjoyed life in the fullest measure. He is affiliated with the Progressive party and he and his wife are members of the United Presby- terian church at Springhill. Liberal, enterprising and broad-minded, Adam Meek shows every evidence of tlie distinguished stock from which he is sprung. This may also be said of his good wife. WILLIAM GODDARD. Among the worthy farmers and good citizens of the last generation was William Goddard, who was born in 1820 in Kentucky and who died in April, 1897, a son of Thomas Goddard, a native of Kentucky, whose parents came from Virginia, originally. Reared in Kentucky and educated in the pioneer schools of that day, the late William Goddard was first married in Kentucky to Emily Hazel- wood, who died after his removal to Decatur county, Indiana. They had five children, of whom only one, Joseph, a carpenter in Indianapolis, is living. The deceased children are Thomas, who was a soldier in the Civil War ; James Wesley, John and Mary. Before coming to Decatur county, Indiana, the late William Goddard taught school for many years in his native state, and was considered, for a man of his generation, to be well educated and well informed. His breadth of information naturally made him a leader, not only in his native community in Kentucky, but also in Decatur county. After the death of the first Mrs. Goddard on December 6, 1866, William Goddard married as his second wife Mary Elizabeth McKinney. who was born in 1832 in Washington county, Indiana, the daughter of John and Margaret (VanCleve) McKinney, natives of Kentucky, who were early set- tlers in Washington county, and who, in 1837, removed to Decatur county, Indiana, settling in Washington township, where they owned a large farm, and became prosperous and well-to-do citizens. Altogether John and Margaret (VanCleave) McKinney had a family of eight children. James Alexander, who died at the age of seventy-seven ; Mrs. Sarah Porter, Will- iam Rankin and Mary Jane, all deceased; Mrs. Mary Elizabeth Goddard; Martha Lovina; Mrs. Rebecca Porter, and Mrs. Emma Pulse, the last three of wIkjui are deceased. Mrs. Goddard, who also survives her husband, is the only memlDcr of her parents" family who is still living. 662 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. By his second marriage to Mary Elizabeth AIcKimiey. the late William Goddard was the father of five children, all of whom are living. Of these children, Samuel, who is an automobile salesman in Boston, Massachusetts, married Lillian Scott, and they have one child, Blanche; William R., who lives on the home farm, married Margaret Talbott, and they have three children. Miles, John \Villiam and Dorothy; Margaret lives at home with her mother; Mrs. Lou Lmmert, the wife of Leonard Emmert, lives four miles southeast of Greensburg, and they have three children, Louis, Mil- dred and Mary Catherine, and Mrs. Bertha Dowden li\es in Greensburg and has one child, IMargaret Ellen. Mr. and Mrs. Goddard lived on the farm of a hundred and sixty acres, located about two miles from the Greensburg corporation limits, until Mr. Goddard's death, when Mrs. Goddard removed to Greensburg. William R., the second born of the family, lives on the home farm. A Republican in politics, the late William Goddard served for many years as a justice of the peace. Although Mrs. Goddard and the family are members of the Presbyterian church, Mr. Goddard was a member of the Methodist church, and for many years was prominently identified with the Odd Fellows lodge. Mr. Goddard, whose memorj- is revered by his loving widow, his children and the host of friends he left behind, was a hard-working, painstaking and successful farmer, who at the time of his death left his family well pro- vided for. He was highly respected in the communit}- where he lived. II GILBERT GORDON KINCAID. Gilbert Gordon Kincaid is among the best known farmers of Fugit township,- and he is also one of its most extensive farmers, owning three hundred and seventy-five acres of good land which is in an excellent state of cultivation. He has a splendid country home, beautifully set in elaborate and well-kept grounds; the large white barn appearing in the background is the most striking evidence of Mr. Kincaid's thrift and prosperity. Born on November 6, 1857, on the farm where he now lives, Gilbert Gordon Kincaid is the son of John and Nancy Helen (Alexander) Kincaid, the former of whom was born in Kentucky in November, 1813, and who died in May, 1894. He was the son of John W. Kincaid, a native of Tennessee, who emigrated to Kentucky and who brought his family to Decatur countv in i8;i, shorth' after the settlement of this countv began. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 663 He was preceded to Indiana, however, by his two sons, Josepli and Andrew, to Decatur county where he entered government land and eventuahy came to own a large tract of land in Fugit township. John W. Kincaid had mar- ried a Miss English. Gilbert Gordon Kincaid is the son of his father by the third marriage. The father was first married to Martha McCracken, no children having been born to this marriage. Later he married a Miss Alexander, a sister of his third wife. By this marriage there were two daughters, Mrs. Martha Helen McCracken and Mrs. Mary A. Martin. He then married Nancy Helen Alexander, to which third union there were six children, three of whom are deceased. The names of the children in the order of their birth, are as follow: Priscilla, who married Sutherland McCoy; Rhoda M., deceased; John, who died at the age of twenty; William, of Decatur county; Gilbert Gordon of this sketch, and Cyrus, deceased. It was the good fortune of John Kincaid, whose home was northwest of his son's place and who also owned a house north of his son's farm, that he prospered as a farmer and became the owner of several farms and extremely wealthy. A Democrat in politics, he always took an active interest in the councils of his party and was regarded as one of its leaders in Decatur county. The family were always active in the Springhill Presbyterian church. Educated in the Clarksburg schools and the New Neighborhood school, Gilbert Gordon Kincaid farmed at home with his father for many years, residing with him and caring for him until his death. At different times his father gave him land, and he also purchased at various times tracts of land in the neighborhood where he lived, until now he owns, as heretofore stated, three hundred and seventy-five acres of land in Fugit township. Mr. Kin- caid has come to be an extensive breeder of mules, and ordinarily has from forty-five to fifty head on the farm where he also raises a great number of horses and cattle, and keeps only the ver}- best grade of live stock. On November 9, 1898, some years after the death of his father, Gilbert Gordon Kincaid was married to Grace McWilliams, daughter of Ephraim Mc\\'illiams. The marriage ceremony was solemnized at Mrs. Kincaid's grandmother's home, near Greensburg, the grandmother being Mrs. Sarah Meek. Four children have been born to this marriage, one of whom, the eldest, Mary Helen, died at the age of ten years. Of the others, Helen Mildred, who was born on February 9, 1904, is now eleven years old; John Alexander was bom on r^Iay jo. 1909; William Gordon, Jr., was born on May 18, 19 14. 664 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. As a Democrat, Mr. Kincaid has always been interested in politics to some extent, but has never been a candidate for any office. Mr. and ]Mrs. Kincaid and family are members of the Springhill Presbyterian church. From any standpoint it must be admitted that he is a worthy son of one of the pioneer farmers of Decatur county, a worthy son of his noble mother, Nancy Helen (Alexander) Kincaid. As a farmer and citizen, he is living up to the worthy example set by his grandfather, John W. Kincaid, and his grandfather, John Alexander, who came from other states to found pioneer homes in the Hoosier wilderness. Any man who is industrious, economical and thrifty, good to his family and interested in public exterprises, deserves to be considered as a good citizen. Gilbert Kincaid is such a man. GLANTON G. WELSH. In the annals of Decatur county, no name stands out more prominently than that of the late Col. Merit C. Welsh, a veteran of two wars, a lawyer of ability, a faithful officer of the county in which nearly his whole life had been spent, and a man who had been found faithful to every trust. A fluent and eloquent speaker. Colonel Welsh was a powerful factor in the civic life of this county for many years, and the memory of his exceptional services to the public long will be fondly cherished. Colonel Welsh was a cuusin of Edward Eggleston, through the Lowry connection, his mother having been a Lowry, and it is undoubted that the high character of the Colonel had much influence in shaping the lofty ideals of the genial and \vcll-!ii\-ed author of "The Hoosier Schoolmaster," "The Annals of a Quiet Neighborhood," and other works which have made so strong an impression upon American let- ters. It is related that Edward Eggleston was most devotedlx* attached to Colonel Welsh, holding the latter as his ideal of a man and a hero, and this aft'ection found reflection in Eggleston's great story, "The Hoosier School- master," in the pages of which book the colonel is fondly mentioned. In attempting a biographical sketch of the gentleman whose name forms the caption of this sketch, Glanton G. Welsh, son of the late Colonel Welsh runl for years the well-knnwn assistant cashier of the Citizens National Bank of Greensburg, this county, the biographer is mindful of the obligation under which this community rests with relation to the memory of Colonel ^Vel.■sh, and a brief summary of the salient points in the active life of that dis- tinguished soldier and Iirilliant lawyer will be incorporated in the same. COL. MKKTT ('. WELSH. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 665 Glanton G. Welsli was born near the village of JMilford, in Clay town- ship, this county, on July lo, 1867, son of Col. Merit C. and Elizabeth (Hanks) Welsh, the former of whom was born in Ripley county, this state, on May 22, 1825, a son of Oliver and Lucy H. (Lowry) Welsh, and the latter of whom was born in Owen count}', Kentucky, on July 19, 1831, a daughter of Sydney D. and Mary (Graves) Hanks, natives of Kentucky and pioneer settlers in this county. Sydney D. Hanks was born in Kentucky in 1793, son of Benjamin Hanks, a Virginian, who married a Dale in the lat- ter state and emigrated to Kentucky, where he became prominent in pioneer affairs. His family is the same as that from which Nancy Hanks, the mother of Aljraham Lincoln, sprang. Sydney D. Hanks married Mary Graves, who was born in Woodford county, Kentucky, in 1796, her mother having been a Cave, and came to Decatur county in the early days of the settlement of this region, his death occurring at Mil ford, this county, in the year 1855, her death occurring on November 28, 1886, in Greensburg. Oliver Welsh was Ijorn in the state of Maryland in 1794, his father a native of Ireland and his nmther a native of Scotland. He married Lucy H. Lowry, who was born in Scott county, Kentucky, in 1800, the daughter of Samuel Lowry. a native of Scotland, her mother having been a native of Ireland, who came to Indiana, locating first in Switzerland county, at a place near Vevay. the home of the Eggleston family. Shortly before the birth of Merit C, the Welshes moved to Ripley county, where they remained until 1828. in which year they came to Decatur county, locating in the Mil- ford neighborhood, where they spent the rest of their lives, the death of 01i\er Welsh occurring on June 16, 1840, his widow dying on June 6, 1832. Merit C. Welsh was born on a fami two and one-half miles east of the village of Napoleon, in Ripley county, on May 22, 1825, a son of Oliver and Lucy H. (Lowry) Welsh, and when three years of age came with his parents to this county, locating in the Milford vicinity, where he grew to manhood. His father died when he was fifteen years of age, and, having lost his mother when he was seven years old, he was left an or])han, indeed. While his op])ortunities for recei\-ing an early education were limited to six months of actual schooling, jNIerit C. Welsh possessed an extraordinary mind : was a clear and direct thinker, far-seeing and broad-minded, and by the time he had attained his majority was a \'ery well-informed man. He sedulously cultiwated his remarkal)le native ability to rec(ignize opportunities which men of lesser caliber would not have seen at all and earlv came t(T l)e recognized as a coming power for good in the community. At the outbreak of the Mexican War, Merit C. Welsh vcjiunteered for 666 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. service and was attached to the regiment led by Col. Jim Lane. He served through that war, having been present at the battle of Buena Vista and other notable engagements of the campaign, in which Lane's regiment was engaged. At the close of the war, Merit C. returned to Milford, where he engaged in the grocery business, in which he was ciuite successful, becoming a very influential citizen and a leading factor in the early development of the com- munity in "which he lived. After three years spent in operating a grocery store at Milford, Mr. Welsh sold the store and engaged in the live-stock business, in which, for fifteen years, he was very successfully employed. When Lincoln's first call was issued for volunteers to put down the rebellion in the Southern states, Merit C. Welsh was one of the first to tender his services, being attached to the Second Regiment, Lidiana Volunteer Infan- try, for the first ninety days' service. Before this regiment could be reor- ganized for the three years' service, Mr. Welsh was made captain of a com- pany which had been recruited in this county, most of the members of which had enlisted from the Milford neighborhood. This company was assigned to the Seventh Regiment, Indiana Volunteer Infantry, being desig- nated D company, and it was with this regiment that this distinguished sol- dier served for three thrilling and perilous years. At the Battle of the Wil- derness, Captain Welsh was made major of the Seventh Regiment, by pro- motion on the field. At a later moment in this same battle, Col. Ira G. Grover, commanding the Seventh Regiment, was put out of commission by reason of a serious wound received on the field, and Major Welsh, as the ranking officer, assumed command of the regiment, being thereafter recog- nized as colonel of the same. On September 20, 1864, the Seventh Regi- ment was mustered out of the service, its three years having expired, and Colonel Welsh, in March, 1865, was appointed colonel of the One Hundred and Forty-sixth Regiment, Indiana Volunteer Infantry, and served until the close of the war in command of that regiment. It is a notable and singular fact that, although Colonel \\'elsh performed valorous service in both the Mexican and the Civil ^Vars, being in the very thick of many of the blood- iest engagements of those two wars, he never received a scratch on the field of battle. He was a fearless soldier and capable officer and was greatly loved and respected by the men under his command, all of whom were devotedly attached to him. For several years before his death, Colonel Welsh was the sole survi\-ing field officer of the Se\'entli Regiment. Colonel Welsh was a lawyer of force and ability and was admitted to the bar of the Decatur circuit court about the year 1875. He was a pleasing and eloquent speaker and was known as a powerful pleader before the court. 1 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 66/ In 1884 he was elected sheriff of Decatur county, and in that year moved to Greensburg, where he spent the rest of his hfe. Before the organization of the Repubhcan party, Colonel Welsh was an ardent Whig, but upon the for- mation of the former party, gave his undivided and unswerving allegiance thereto, and for many years was one of the leaders of the party in this county and throughout this section of the state. On October 19, 1848, Merit C. Welsh was united in marriage to Eliza- beth Hanks, of the family from which descended Nancy Hanks, mother of Abraham Lincoln, as set out above, and to this union there were born four children, namely : Ardry, who lives at Anderson, Indiana ; Glanton G., assistant cashier of the Citizens National Bank of Greensburg, the immediate subject of this biographical sketch: S. Dale, of Greensburg, and Mrs. Clara Martin, of Lawton, Oklahoma. The mother of these children died on December 15, 1910, after which time Colonel Welsh made his home with his son, Glanton G. Welsh, in Greensburg, until his death, February 17, 1913. Glanton G. Welsh was reared in Adams, receiving his elementary edu- cation in the schools of that town, supplementing the same by a course in the Greensburg high school, from which he was graduated with the class of 1889. Following his graduation, he taught school for ten years, at the end of which valuable term of public service he entered the Citizens National Bank at Greensburg and has been continuously connected with that sound old financial institution since 1899, during the past nine 3'ears of which time he has occupied the responsible position of assistant cashier. On December 28, 1892, Glanton G. Welsh was united in marriage to Alice McConnell, daughter of James M. and Elizabeth (Hardy) McCon- nell, both members of old families in this county, and to this union one child has been born, a daughter, Mabel Elizabeth, born on IMarch 19, 1894. Mr. and Mrs. Welsh are members of the Baptist church and take an active part in all good works in Greensburg, being regarded as among the leaders in all movements designed to elevate the social and cultural life of the community. Mr. Welsh is a Republican, one of the local leaders in that party. In 1892 he was elected city clerk of Greensburg and served in that important capacity until 1899, giving the city most excellent service. He is a member of the Knights of Pythias and of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, and takes a warm interest in the affairs of these two popular fra- ternal societies. Mr. Welsh is known as a progressive business man of sound judgment in financial and commercial matters and he is held in the highest regard in business circles in Greensburg and throughout the county. He and Mrs. Welsh take an interested part in the social affairs of the city and are very popular in their large circle of friends. 668 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. WILLIAM G. SMILEY. To have inspired sufficient confidence in tlie breast of shrewd men of affairs, who constitute directorates of banks, to insure one's election to the dignified and responsible position of president of a bank at the age of thirty- six years, is no small distinction. When, upon turning to the formal statis- tics covering banking affairs, one finds that there are but two other men in the United States who have been elected to a Ijank presidency at an earlier age, this distinction seems all the more notable. L^pon the organization of the Burney State Bank, at Burney, in Clay township, this county, in the year 191 3, the directors of that now well-established and substantial financial institution, in their search for a president who would inspire the confidence of all, turned, as by common consent, to William G. Smiley, whose suc- cessful management of his nwn extensive personal aliairs in that neigh- borhood had excited the admiration of older men in the community, and Mr. Smiley was unanimously elevated to that position ; a singularly happy choice on the part of the bank's directorate, which neither that Ijody nor the citizens at large ever have had occasion to regret. Mr. Smiley is one of the large landowners of Decatur county a'nd the enterprise and energy which he had displayed in the operation of his extensive farming interests gave assurrance that the same wise judgment and energy would be brought to Ijear upon the management of the affairs of the bank, and this conclusion on the part of the directors of the Burney State Bank has been amply veri- fied by time, the bank having been unusually successful for an institution so recently organized, there being now more than four hundred depositors ]>atronizing the same, a list of pleased ctistomers that is constantlv growing. \Villiam G. Smiley was born on the old Smiley homestead in Clay town- ship, Decatur county, Indiana, on January 20, 1877, son of George W. and Eliza fBlackmore) Smiley, both members of old and prominent families in this county. George W. Smiley, who died in 1907. was the son of William and Mary Ann ( Kenny 1 Smiley, the former of whom was born in Pennsyl- vania on IMarch 14, 1814, the son of Irish parents. Upon arriving at man- hood, William Smiley moved to Butler county, Ohio, where he married ]\Iary Ann Kenny, about the year 1836, and on January 7, 1849, came to Decatur cotmty, locating in Clay township, on what is now known as the Smiley homestead, and by the exercise of energy and a display of enter- prise that made him one of the foremost men in his community, presently became one of the most extensive landowners in the county, he being at one DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 669 time the owner of nearly one thousand acres of land. As they advanced in years and as their children arrived at manhood and womanhood, William Smiley and his wife divided the home acres among the children and moved to Greensburg, where for nearly twenty years they lived in quiet retire- ment, his death occurring in 1893, she surviving him by three years, both dying at the age of seventy-nine. In a biographical sketch relating to Will- iam G. Smiley's uncle, T. K. Smiley, presented elsewhere in this volume, there are additional details regarding the genealogy of this interesting fam- ily, to which the reader is respectfully referred for further information. William G. Smiley was reared on the paternal farm, his father always having remained on the old Smiley homestead, and received his early school- ing in the excellent local schools. This he supplemented by a course in the Hartsxille Normal College, which he further supplemented by a comprehen- sive course in a business college at Hope, this state. He entered upon the life of a farmer amply equipped to give to his vocation the most thoughtful attention and from the start he brought to bear upon his extensive opera- tions the most approved methods of modern agricultural schools. Mr. Smiley is the owner of seven hundred acres of fine land, three hundred acres of which lies east of the village of Burney and four hundred acres of which lies south of that town. He gives much attention to the raising of thoroughbred stock, horses, mules and hogs being his specialties, he paying little attention to the breeding of cattle. He annually ships about one hundred head of mules to Atlanta, Georgia, for the Southern market and usually ships from five to six hundred hogs each year. "Fred S.," bred on his farm, was the first horse bred in Decatur county to step a mile in 2 107^. "Burney Patch," also bred on Mr. Smiley's farm, has a record of 2:1234- Mr. Smiley also is an enthusiastic corn grower, giving particular attention to the raising of Yellow Dent and Volger's White corn and is locally noted for his fine crops. Since being elected to the presidency of the Burney State Bank, Mr. Smiley has given much attention to that rapidly growing institution and is now recognized as one of the foremost bankers of the county, his sound judgment and excellent executive ability giving to his conclusions regarding questions of conservative investment much weight among his business associates. At the age of thirty years, William G. Smiley was united in marriage to Martha Inez Ardery, daughter of William Ardery, who died on March II, 1913, leaving one child, a son seven months of age. since which time Mr. Smiley has made his home with his widowed mother in Burne}-. It is not too much to say that in the thirty-eight years of his life, Mr. Smiley has 670 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. accomplished remarkaljle things in the way of successfuHy conducting the attairs under his immediate direction, and his associates very properly rank him among the leading men of affairs in Decatur county. He is a member of the Methodist church at Burney and is devoted to all good works alifecting that neighl)orhood as well as to the best interests of the county at large and is held in the highest esteem in his large circle of friends and acquaintances. LINTON W. SANDS. Almost without exception the world is willing to do honor to those to- whom honor is due. Men who have lived long and useful lives in a com- munity, who have borne their share of the public duties and who have, dis- charged worthily their obligations as citizens in a free country, seldom go without their reward. The Republican party of Decatur county was not slow to recognize the superior merit and large personal worth of its present county auditor, Linton W. Sands, who during a long term as deputy auditor discharged capably the duties of that important office. Appointed deputy in 1904, he remained in this responsible position for eight years, and in 1912 he was elected auditor for a term of four years. Linton W. Sands was born in Fugit township, Decatur county, Intli- ana, and is the son of James P. and Eliza Ann (Williams) Sands,' the for- mer of whom was one of the early settlers of Decatur county, having come here from Ripley county where he was a wagon maker. He settled at St. Maurice in Fugit township, and later removed to Springhill, and the latter was a native of Ohio, who came to Indiana in pioneer times, living here with her aunt, her mother having died when she was a small child. In 1 86 1 James P. Sands enlisted in Wilder's Battery, and served throughout the war. Three weeks from the day, however, when he left home, he was taken prisoner at Harpers Ferry, but was soon paroled and, after a short furlough home, returned to his regiment with which he remained until the close of the war, when he was mustered out of service. He saw a great deal of hard service, but fortune seemed to smile upon him, and during the long war he was neither wounded nor in the hospital. His first duty was to carry ammunition for the cannon, but afterward he was promoted to the position of artificer. He was an intense patriot at heart, loyal to his country and loyal to his flag. At the close of the war he came home to Decatur county and resumed his trade as a wagon maker. He was DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 671 a well-known and highly respected citizen in this community. Shortly after coming back from the front, he moved his family to Fugit township, settling in Springhill, where he and his wife spent the remainder of their days. He was an ardent Republican, and he was also a member of the United Presby- terian church. Early in her life she was a school teacher and was engaged in teaching school while her husband was a soldier in the Civil War. She taught for twenty-five or thirty years altogether, and was a cultured and highly educated woman. Her father was a dairyman in Cincinnati, Ohio, during his prime, and owned the largest herd of dairy cattle in the state of Ohio. He was one of the wealthiest and most substantial citizens of Hamil- ton county, Ohio. Few men of his day and generation living in Hamilton- county, Ohio, surpassed him in capacity for business or in business accom- plishments. To James P. and Eliza Ann Sands were l)orn one daughter and one son, Mrs. Clara C. (Sands) Henry, the wife of James Henry, is a resi- dent of Fair Haven, Ohio, and Linton W. Sands, a resident of Greensburg, Indiana. Educated both in the common and high schools of Springhill, Linton W. Sands, after leaving the latter, became a telegraph operator at New Point in Decatur county, and when he had mastered telegraphy, took a position at that place in the railroad office there 'and remained for twenty-three years. Mr. Sands' wife before her marriage was Mrs. Anna E. (Wise), whose father was a soldier in the Civil War and was killed in the service. After quitting service in the railroad office in 1904, Mr. Sands came to Greensburg as deputy auditor and served eight years, or until 1912, when he was himself elected county auditor. He is still holding this office. Mr. Sands has been a stanch Republican all his life, and each campaign he has been on the firing line, and his personal efforts have had much to do with the success of the Republican party in Decatur county. Mr. and Mrs. Sands have two children, Mrs. Cora M. Clouds and Mrs. Grace M. Gray, the former of whom lives in Indianapolis, and the latter of whom lives on a farm in Decatur county. Linton W. Sands is a member of the United Presbyterian church at Springhill, while Mrs. Sands is a member of the Baptist church at Rossburg. Mr. Sands is a liberal contributor to the support of religious enterprises, as well as all other public movements. His election to the important office he now holds is a forcible testimonial to his popularity as a citizen and his standing as an honorable, upright and conscientious man. He is a very worthy citizen of this great county. ^'J2 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. ABRAM HENDRICKS TALBOTT. The histor}' of the Talbott and Hendricks families is closely inter- twined with the political, social, agricultural and commercial development of Decatur county, Henry H. Talbott, the father of Abram Hendrick Talbott, having, as deputy clerk of Jefferson county, Indiana, come to Decatur county as one of the organizers. It was his wife, Eliza Hendricks, who was the daughter of Thomas Hendricks and the cousin of Governor Thomas A. Hen- dricks, whose father. Major John Hendricks, was a brother of Governor William Hendricks, the second governor of Indiana. Thus is the promi- nence of the two families, from which Abram Hendricks Talbott is descended, apparent. Himself a merchant for many years of Greensburg and Decatur county, he is one of the best known men in this section of the state. Although now retired, he was engaged in the drug business at Greensburg for a period from 1869 to 191 2, during all this time being actively interested in the farm- ing development of Decatur county, in which county he purchased his first land in the year 1885, owning at the present time a splendid farm of two hundred and nineteen acres, two miles east of Greensburg. Abram H. Talbott was born on May 26, 1837, in the old home on the north side of the public square at Greensburg, and is the son of Henry H. and Eliza (Hendricks) Talbott, the former of whom was born on ]\Iarch 25, 1800, in Kentucky and who died in 1872. The son of Richard C. and Drusilla (Grover) Talbott, who moved from Kentucky to Indiana and settled in Ripley county early in the nine- teenth century, Henry H. Talbott was reared by a relati\'e and served as deputy clerk at Madison, Jefferson county, Indiana, for some time, acting in this capacity when he helped organize Decatur county, of which he was the first county clerk, serving for a period of thirty-seven years and eight months. He was also recorder of Decatur county for a period of twenty- eight years, or until the Legislature enacted a law prohibiting one man from holding two offices. Previous to the act of the Legislature he held both the office of county clerk and county recorder at the same time. For many years engaged in business as a partner with his father-in-kiw, Thomas Hen- dricks, he became well-to-do, and esijecially a large landowner. A Whig and a Republican in jiolitics, he was also a member of the Centenary Meth- odist Episcopal church. During his life he was a prominent member of the Masonic fraternity. His wife, who before her marriage was Eliza Hendricks, was born on September 4, 1802, at Greensburg, Pennsylvania, the daughter •of Thomas Hendricks, who was an uncle of Governor and Vice-president AP.ItAM ir. TAI.BOTT. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 673 Thomas A. Hendricks. They were the sons of Major John Hendricks and grandsons of Abram Hendricks, a descendant of the Huguenots, who immi- grated to New Jersey and thence to Pennsylvania before the Revohitionary War. Abram Hendricks served four terms in the Pennsylvania General Assembly, first in 1792, and the last in 1798. Abram Hendricks was not only the father of Major John Hendricks, but he also was the father of Will- iam Hendricks, the second governor of Indiana, who preceded his brother in removal from Ohio to this state. Major John Hendricks, prior to 1829, resided with his family at Zanesville, Ohio. His wife, whose maiden name was Jane Thompson, and a niece were the only members of the Thompson family who came West. Shortly after their marriage, Major John Hen- dricks and wife moved to Muskingum, Ohio, where thej' lived for some time in a rude house, in which were born two sons, Abram and Thomas A. The next year, 1830, Major John Hendricks moved with his little family to Madison, Indiana. The first wife of Thomas Hendricks, the father of Mrs. Eliza Talbott, was a Miss Trimball, who died young. After her death, he married a Miss Paul. Thomas Hendricks was born in 1774 and died on March 31, 1835. He came down the Ohio river by flat-boat to Madison, and from there to Greensburg, bringing with him a load of iron and casting for trade and bar- ter. A successful merchant in the early days, he purchased and shipped live stock in great quantities, driving hogs and cattle to Madison, Cincinnati and Lawrenceburg and shipping from these points by boat. By his first marriage, Thomas Hendricks had four children : Mrs. Silas Stuart, INIrs. Jacob Stuart, Mrs. H. H. Talbott and Rachel. By the second marriage, there were two children, Eunice and Elizabeth, both deceased. To Henry H. and Eliza (Hendricks) Talbott were born eight children: Rachel, deceased ; Sarah Ann, who married W. S. Woodfill, both now deceased; Drusilla G., who is now eighty-six years old and the mother of Cortez E. Moss and six other living sons, resides with her son on the farm; Abram H., the subject of this sketch; Richard C, in 1831 and now deceased; Thomas H., January 13, 1835, died on May 26, 1836; Henry H., retired, who lives in Greensburg, and Mrs. Mary Eliza King, of Indianapolis. Reared in Greensburg, Indiana, Abram H. Talbott attended the local schools. For many years he assisted his father in the county clerk's office, and in 1861 engaged in the hardware business with his brothers, his father having set him up in this business, which was conducted under the firm name of Talbott & Sons. During a part of this time he also operated a dry goods store in this citv. Selling out both stores in 1867, he clerked for several (43) 674 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. years in a drug store, and after saving enough money to purchase an inter- est in his uncle Abram Hendricks' store, he formed a partnership with his son Thomas, and three years after the partnership was formed bought out Thomas Hendricks and remained in business for thirty years. This store is now owned by Joe Moss. In 19 12 he retired from Inisiness after a long and busy career, a career which had been crowned with unusual success. In 1880 Mr. Talbott was married to Clara Armington, the daughter of Dr. William Armington, an early physician of this county, who practiced here for many years, but who was a native of New York state. He died during the early part of the Civil War, at the age of fifty-two. Mrs. Tal- bott was born on June 13, 1847, ^^'^^^ ^^^^^^ on February 15, 1914. A Republican in politics, Mr. Talbott has never been active in the coun- cils of any party. He recalls that the first courthouse built in Greensburg was a double log stnicture with a driveway in the middle. It was built by Thomas Hendricks, his grandfather, during the early part of the nineteenth century. Abram H. Talbott has been a generous man during his entire life. He has always entertained great respect for the opinions of others, and if one differed from him in any subject he has always been kind, courteous and considerate, and has never engaged in needless debate nor fruitless contro- versies with those who held contrary opinions. Generous to a fault, he has never souglit to deprive those with whom he has come in contact from act- ing and thinking" along their own lines and in their own way. He has been a just man and has never exacted in friendship or business more than he was willing to grant or allow. He has believed that the weakest arm is strong enough when it strikes with the sword of justice. EDWARD C. LOWE. Among the early settlers of Decatur county, Indiana, were James and Cyrus Hamilton, who came in 1822. The Donnells, McCoys, and Hojikms came in 1823. William Custer, who lived about a mile south of the old Lowe homestead at Kingston, Indiana, is supposed to have preceded Seth and Rebecca LoWe, the founders of the Lowe family in Decatur county, and from whom is sprung Edward C. Lowe, a prominent manufacturer of Greensburg, and the grandson of Seth and Rebecca Lowe. It may be said truly that this worthy representative of the third generation in Decatur county from the standpoint of industry, intelligence and citizenship is Jiving DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 675 up worthily to the example of his progenitors, who blazed the trail into this county, ar.d here established the ancestral home. Edward C. Lowe, who was born on May 6, 1866, at Kingston, is the son of Alfred and Isabelle (Ouigley) Lowe, the former of whom was born on May 7, 1826, and who died on September 5, 1887, and the latter of whom was born on May 9, 1835, and who died on December 22, 1910. The latter was the daughter of Thomas and Catherine Quigley, who was left an orphan when a small child. Alfred Lowe was the son of Seth and Rebecca Lowe, the former of whom was born in Glenwood, Wilkes county, North Carolina, on December 22, 1787, and who died in Mills county, Iowa, in May, 1871, in his eighty-fourth year. In 1879 he had moved with his father's family to Favette county, Kentucky, not far from Lexington, and after living there for some years, had moved to Montgomery county, where, in 1810, he married Rebecca Ryan, who was born in Virginia, October 22, 1790, and who died on Fel^ruary 5, 1865, in her seventy-fifth year. They had seven children, Polly, Matilda, Jackson, George, Eliza, Franklin and Alfred. Eliza, born in 1819, died in her second year, and Franklin, the only survivor of this family, who was born in 1816, is now living in Carson, Iowa. Seth and Rebecca Lowe, having come to Indiana, and settled in Dear- born county, in 18 19, two years later removed to Kingston, Decatur county, and there entered land. On his trip to Decatur county, Seth Lowe was accomjjanied by two of his children, who after he had done some deaden- ing, went back to Dearborn county for the remainder of the family, leaving the children in the care of two men who were assisting him in the work. Among the first pioneers of this county to plant an orchard, was Seth Lowe and people came great distances to get apples from his orchard. He was truly a temperance man and never used tobacco or intoxicating bever- ages, and never used profane language. A public-spirited man, he was ardently favorable to public improvements, such as pikes and railroads, and gave his land upon which to build churches and schools. He was among the first citizens of the county to introduce improved breeds of stock, importing choice animals from other states. His worthy wife was remem- bered long after her death. The Lowe house became known far and near for the generous hospitality accorded strangers and men weary after a long day's ride in a wagon or on horseback found shelter from storm and darkness in the Lowe home. Although they were not members of any church, they believed in the kind of Christianity as set forth and practiced 676 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. by the lowly Nazarene, and the Reverend Mr. Stogdel is said to have preached in the Lowe home. In an unbroken forest was performed the arduous toil upon which the family fortune was builded. Alfred Lowe was a farmer upon the old homestead until his father's death. He was crippled when twenty-one years old, while assisting in the construction of the Kingston church, while work- ing on the frame of the church, he fell and broke a leg. Later he spent one year in the West after the homestead was sold, accompanying Seth and Jackson, who were pioneers in the state of Iowa. He, however, w'ent to Kansas, and after a time returned to Indiana, and lived in the village of Kingston until his death. Alfred and Isabelle (Ouigley) Lowe had eight children, as follow : Theresa Jarte Ardery, wife of David A. Ardery, of Washington township: Seth Samuel, of Greensburg; Charles, of Kansas, William Walter, deceased; Edward C, the subject of this sketch; Cather- ine Ella, wife of Thomas M. Hamilton, of Kingston; Marsh, of Greens- burg, and Arthur J., the assistant cashier of the Greensburg National Bank. Bom and reared in Decatur county, Indiana, and educated in the King- ston schools, Edward C. Lowe has had a most interesting career. After learning the blacksmith's trade early in life, he worked at the trade for one year in Greensburg, and then worked for the National Fireproofing Com- pany, of Jersey City, New Jersey, for one year, after which he worked six months in the Philadelphia car shops, and was engaged for four years in the restaurant business at Brooklyn, New York. Returning to Greensburg in 1907, he engaged in the shoe business for five years, and then established the Rex salt business, the product of which is now manufactured by the Styers jVIercantile Company, organized in 19 12, with a capital of ten thou- sand dollars. This company manufactures and sells stock and poultry remedies, as well as One Minute Brand insect powder. The company presi- dent is Lemuel P. Dobyns, and the secretary and manager is Edward C. Lowe, Fred St\'ers, who was originally a member of the firm, retired, the interest having been purchased by Mr. Lowe. The firm does a business of more than i\\e tlnjusand dollars annually, and has its own brick building. On May 18, 1902, Edward C. Lowe was married to Florence Heis- lier, of Philadelphia, the daughter of Mrs. Mary Heislier. To this happy marriage have been born two daughters and one son, Edna, Irma and Will- ,iam Alfred. Mr. Lowe is a Republican, as was his father before him. He is also a Presbyterian, which was the faith of his father, the latter having been, during practically all his life, a member of the Kingston church. Edward DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 677 C. Lowe is a member of the Knights of Pythias lodge at Greensburg, and also of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows. When Edward C. Lowe's grandfather blazed his way through Decatur county over Flat Rock with two hired men, the country was all under water, and when he reached the high knoll in Fugit township, the present site of Kingston, the Indian camp-fires could be seen in the distance. Instead of the great trees and unbroken forest, there are now green pastures and fields of grain that feed the people in the uttermost parts of the earth. The wilderness of this pioneer country has been made to blossom as the rose. If the pioneers could have had the forward vision to see what nature has hidden iit the air and earth, if Seth and Rebecca Lowe could have forseen the comfort and convenience of their children and grandchildren, it would have been to them like an Oriental dream. The life career of Edward C. Lowe is a worldly realization of the aims and ideals of his pioneer grand- parents in this county. CLIFFORD F. JONES. One of the enterprising younger industries of Greensburg, Indiana, is the Jones Lumber Company, which has built up a large trade in lumber, building material of all kinds and coal. This firm was organized by Clitford S. and Clifford F. Jones on February i, 19 lo, at which time it succeeded the Greensburg Lumber Company. Following the death of Clifford S. Jones, H. C. Kofoid became a partner in the enterprise. Mr. Kofoid sold out his interests on March 29, 19 15, to the Jones Lumber Company, who have a well-equipped plant which covers one and one-half acres and does an excellent business in Greensburg and Decatur county. Clifford F. Jones, the present head of the firm, who was born on Sep- tember 30, 1886, in Chicago, Illinois, is the son of Clifford S. and Delia (Flageole) Jones, natives of Canada and Illinois, respectively. The former was born in 1865 and died, August 18, 1912. Until 1897 he was engaged in the lumber business at Chicago, and in that year located at Stanford, Illinois, where he was engaged in the lumber business until February i, 1910. At that time he located in Greensburg and engaged in the lumber business, first under the firm name of C. S. Jones Lumber Company, but upon his death, the change in the firm, heretofore referred to, was made. A very successful business man and highly respected in the various com- munities where he was engaged in business, he was a member of the Demo- 6/8 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. cratic party, the Christian church, the Knights of Pythias and the Benevo- lent and Protective Order of Elks. His wife, who before her marriage was Delia Flageole. was born in Illinois in 1864, and was of French descent. Clifford F. Jones was the onh' child born to this union. Educated in the public schools of Chicago and Stanford, Illinois, and especially in the Stanford high school and the Eureka College at Eureka, Illinois, Clifford F. Jones enjoyed exceptionally fine preparation for a busi- ness career. With the exception of two years, 1907-1909, during which he was located in Colorado, and there engaged in o]3erating a lumber yard, he was with his father cnntinuously from the time he arrix'ed at maturity until the father's death. Mr. Jones was married, July 10, 1910, to Litta Woodson, a native and resident of Phillips. Nebraska. To this union have been born two children, Forbes and Gail. Clifford F. Jones is a member of the Christian church. He is a Demo- crat and is a member of the Knights of Pythias, the Benevolent and Pro- tective Order of Elks and the Fraternal Order of Eagles. Popular in Decatur county, Clifford F. Jones has made many friends, since moving to Greensburg with his father in 1910. Not only has he established a reputation as one of the enterprising yotmg business men of the cit}', Init he is a man of so agreeable a personality that he has naturally attracted to himself friends in large numbers. GEORGE N. REED. Specific mention is made of many of the worthy citizens of Decatur county within the pages of this book, citizens who have figured in the growth and development of the county and whose interests are identified with its progress. Hundreds of persons have contributed to the well-being of its various communities and among them should be mentioned George N. Reed, a successful farmer of Washington township. George N. Reed was born in St. Paul, Decatur county, Indiana, on November 9, 1873. the son of E. R. and Mary E. (Neff) Reed, the former of whom was born near North Vernon, Indiana, and who is now sixty-seven years old and living retired in Adams. His father. Reasonable E. Reed, was an early settler of Indiana and a brick-mason by trade. Reasonable E. Reed was also one of the successful contractors of pioneer times in Decatur DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 679 ■county and built several of the best Ijrick houses now standing in Greens- burg. He was a member of the Methodist church and a stanch Democrat throughout Hfe. His son, E. R., the father of George N., also was a Demo- crat and a member of the Methodist church. Mary E. Nefif was a native of Decatur county, born in old St. Omer, and died twenty-six years ago on a farm near her birthplace. Her father, William . Neff, was a native of Pennsylvania, and of German extraction. Her mother was of Irish extrac- tion and a devout Christian woman and noble character. At the time of his mother's death, George N. Reed was only fourteen years old, and one of a family of seven children. His mother was a woman of gentle disposition and a firm believer in principles of right living. Her memory has been long cherished by the family of children she left and she is honored today for the noble part she bore in the early trials of married life. George N. Reed lived in St. Paul until seven years of age when the family moved to a farm north of St. Paul, where they remained until he was thirteen, when the family mo\ed back to St. Paul and, after remaining two or three years, moved to a farm north of St. Omer, living there until George N. Reed was nineteen years old. At this time he purchased a livery stable at Adams in partnership with his uncle, George T. Reed, and continued in this business for about two years, when he sold oiit his interest to his uncle and began working for C. E. Shields, buying grain and selling implements for three or four years. After this time Mr. Reed rented a farm near Adams known as the Griff Adkins farm and cultivated this for ten years. In 1909 Mr. Reed went to Oklahoma, where he purchased two hun- dred and forty acres of land in what was known as Comanche, but what is now known as Tillman county. He owned eighty acres of this tract two and one-half years and the remainder three and a half years. As a result of his speculation in Oklahoma real estate, he made a great deal of money and upon coming to Decatur county in 1909 purchased a farm east of Greensburg, known as the Henry Duncan farm of ninety-four acres. Later he sold this farm at a profit and bought the land where he now lives, about three-quarters of a mile from Adams, situated in Washington township. Before Mr. Reed rented the Adkins farm, he was married to Nora Wright, who was born in August, 1872, in Bartholomew county, and who is a memlier of the famous Wright family, the genealogy of which is given in the sketch of Caleb Stark W'right, found elsewhere in this volume. Mr. and Mrs. Reed were married on Septemljer 12, 1896. Mrs. Reed's father, John Wright, has been deceased for fifteen years and was seventy-five years old at the time of his death. He was born in Virginia and came to Decatur i 680 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. county, Indiana, when twenty-five years old and engaged in farming, at which occupation he was very successful. He was a shrewd, capable busi- ness man and a student of public affairs and politics, a man who loved to read the Bible and who took a great interest in public movements. Mr. and Mrs. Reed have had four children, as follow : Florence, Francis William, Orliff,' who died in infancy, and Arthur. Besides rearing their own children, Mr. and Mrs. Reed have reared Mr. Reed's sister's son from the age of four to the age of fourteen. This nephew was Henry C. Lowe, who died in Oklahoma. Mr. Reed for several years has made a specialty of raising hogs, corn and clover. His farm consists of level land. There is not a foot of waste in the entire tract. George N. Reed is a Republican. Fie has never aspired to office and has never been especially prominent in political affairs. He is a man, how- ever, who is well-respected by the people of his neighborhood. ANDREW S. WILLEY. One of the "top-notch" farms of Decatur county is that of the late Louis Willey, pleasantly situated on the Michigan road, about two and one- half miles northwest of Greensburg, in Washington township. This farm of two hundred and thirty-five acres, all in one tract, was purchased by Louis Willey about half a century ago and is now being very successfully operated by his son, Andrew S. Willey, who remains on the old home place with his widowed mother, Mrs. Mary S. Willey. Louis Willey, who was born on February 25, 1826, died at his home in Washington township, this county, on July 2;^, 191 1, was born in Hamil- ton county, Ohio, the son of Horace and Anna (Tate) Willey, the former of whom was bom in Massachusetts on February 13, 1792, emigrated to Ohio as a young man, locating in Hamilton county, where he spent the remainder of his life. Horace and Anna ( Tate) \\'il!ey were married, March 7, 1822. His wife, who was Anna Tate, was born in Pennsylvania on June 16, 1792. Horace Willey, a very substantial citizen of Hamilton ci>unty, Ohio, died on March 3, 1880. Louis Willey was a Whig until the organiza- tion of the Republican party in 1856, in which year he allied himself with the latter party and remained stanchly loyal to the principles of the same the rest of his life. During the last year of the Civil War he enlisted in behalf DECATUR COUNTY. INDIANA. 68 1 of the cause of the Union and servetl in the ranks of the One Hundred and Thirty-eighth Regiment, Ohio Volunteer Infantry, until that regiment was mustered out of service at the close of the war. Louis Willey was reared on the paternal farm in Hamilton county, Ohio, and \\hen a young man came to Decatur county. For a year he re- mained in the city of Greensburg, at the end of which time he settled on a tract of land in Washington township, which his family still owns and occu- pies. That was about fifty years ago, since which time the farm has been brought to a high state. of cultivation, being one of the most productive and valuable farms, according to its acreage, in the county. It is unusually well improved, the farm house and outlying buildings being of a rich and sub- stantial character, everything about the place indicating thrift, industry and good management. The Willeys have their own gas well on the place and the fuel and light question is thus quite easily disposed of by them. Louis Willey was an excellent farmer and a successful stock raiser and became known as one of the most substantial and enterprising farmers of the county. His methods were progressive and were consequently attended by good results, the Willey farm being regarded as a model throughout that section of the community. The methods so successfully adopted by his father have been followed by Andrew S. Willey, who is now managing the place, every- thing about the farm being kept up in first-class condition. On April 26, 1863, Louis Willey was united in marriage to Mary Sefton, who was born on April 19, 1840, the daughter of William and Catherine (Shuck) Sefton, prominent residents of this county, the former of whom was born in 1805 and died on October 29, 1868, and the latter of whom was born on May 15, 1806, and died on October 15, 1869. William Sefton, who for years was familiarly known in this county as "Ohio Billie" Sefton, was born in Butler county, Ohio, his father having been a native of Ireland. William Sefton married Catherine Shuck, also a native of Butler county, and came to Decatur county, settling on a farm in Clinton township, the farm now' owned by Samuel Shirk, where he and his wife spent the reiuain- der of their lives, becoming recognized as among the most influential of the pioneer residents of that neighborhood. They were the parents of nine children, namely: Henry T., who went to Colorado some years ago and died in 1914; Eliza Ellen, deceased; Elizabeth, deceased; Michael, deceased; Isaac, a well-known resident of Greensburg, this county; Edward, deceased; Mary, who married Louis Willey, still living on the Willey farm ; Sarah, who lives in Greensburg, and William W., retired, who lives in Kokomo, Indiana. ■682 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. To Louis and Alary (Sefton) Wille_v were born three ehildren, as fol- low: William Henry, who died in infancy; Andrew S., born on September 12, 1865, lives on the home place with his mother, and Frank \\'., born on June 30, 1869, who is a cement contractor, doing business in the city of Greensburg, this county, where he has achieved a pronounced success in business. He married Bert Douglas, October 15, 1903, to whom was born one daughter, Pauline, on January 21, 1905. Mrs. Willey is a member of the Methodist church and for many years has been regarded as among the leaders in all good works in the community in which she lives, being held in the highest regard by all within the circle of her acquaintance. She and her son have a very pleasant home, which is the center of much genial hospitality, and they enjoy the highest esteem of all. As noted above, Andrew S. Willey is a progressive and enterprising farmer and is looked upon as one of the substantial citizens of the county, being held in the highest repute by all who know him. Mr. Willey's farm is called the Forest farm, owing to the great forest trees wdiich still remain upon it. ERNEST D. POWER. No more attractive farm can be found in all Decatur county than the tract of one hundred and ninety acres in Fugit township, owned by Ernest D. Power, an enterprising young farmer and regarded as one of the most successful in that county. Not only efficient, industrious and progres- sive in agricultural methods, but the same things may be said of him as a ■citizen, and this is not at all strange when we remember that personal habits and personal methods apply quite as much to one's rank and value as a citizen as they do to one's rank and value as a farmer, lawyer or business man. Of course, his father before him, who is now living retired, was a successful farmer, the son learning the fundamentals of correct farming from the father. His success in agriculture is due partially to the fact that he has been able to combine stock raising with crop raising and as a mule, hog and cattle raiser has no superior in this county. Ernest D. Power, farmer and stockman of Fugit township, Decatur county, Indiana, was born on November i, 1871, in Milroy, Rush county, Indiana, and is the son of George and Lurissa (Crawford) Power, natives of Rush county, and now living retired. The father was the son of the late John Power, a native of Kentuckv and an early settler in Rush countv. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 683 George and Lurissa (Crawford) Power have had three children. May, who hves at home; Ray C, who is a farmer near Alilroy, and Ernest D., the subject of this sketch. Immediately after finishing his education in the schools of Milroy, Indiana, Mr. Power purchased a farm in Rush county, in 1894, consisting of two hundred and five acres, and thirteen years later, in October, 1907, removed to Fugit township, Decatur county, purchasing his present farm at that time. He has been living in Decatur county, therefore, for about eight years, and has come to be well known in Fugit township, and in fact throughout all Decatur county, being related by marriage and otherwise to some of the oldest families in Decatur county. Mr. Power was first married, in 1895, to Mary McCracken, the daugh- ter of H. T. McCracken, an old settler of Fugit township. By this marriage he had one child, Ruth, aged fifteen years, who is a student in the Clarks- burg high school. Mrs. Power died in October, 1910, and in October, 191 1, Mr. Power was married again to Leila Logan, the daughter of Nathan M. and Rebecca (Martin) Logan, the former of whom was born on September 27, 1857, in Decatur county, and the latter of whom was born on Decem- ber 29, i860, in Decatur county. ]\Irs. Power, who is the eldest child of her parents, was born on May 31, 1882, and graduated from Monmouth College in 1908. She has been the mother of one daughter. Carmen Georgia, born on August 13, 1913. Of Mrs. Power's ancestry it may be said that her father, who owns a beautiful home of ninety acres of land in Fugit township, and one hundred and sixty acres of land in Jackson county, Oklahoma, was born in a brick house erected by his father, Joseph A. Logan, in 1855. Joseph A., who was born on January 9, 1821, and who was brought to Indiana, on horseback, at the age of six months, by his father and mother, Martin and ]Mary (Rankin) Logan, was married in 1842 to Mary Jane Strane\-, a native of Lexington, Kentucky, born on May 12, 1824. She died on May 26, 1888. They had eight children, of whom all are deceased, except Nathan M., the father of Mrs. Power. The deceased children were as follow: Mrs. Nancy M. May, born on March 9, 1844, died in 1909; Mrs. Mary A. Cork, October 14, 1845, 'lied in 191 1 ; Mrs. IMargaret F. Manlove, August 13, 1847, died on August 5, 1S89; John H., November 8, 1849, 's deceased; Leander, February 9, 1853, died in 191 1 ; William R., August 20, 1855, died in 1857; Luna A., October 23, 1865. died on January 3, 1891. A hard worker and an industrious citizen, Joseph A. Logan resided on the farm, in the house he built in 1855, the greater part of his life, the only 684 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. exceptions Ijeing short residences in Oxford and Rushville. In the latter years of his life he lived with his children. He died in 1913 at the age of ninety-four years. His father, Martin, who was born in 1800, and who died on December 18, 1870, and his mother, who before her marriage was Mary Rankin, who was born in 1799, and who is now deceased, lived on the farm, now included in the limits of Lexington, Kentucky, on the site now occupied by the college. In 1821 Martin Logan journeyed to Decatur county, Indiana, and settled on a government tract of one hundred and sixty acres at a time when wolves and panthers were plentiful. This farm is now occupied by Ezra Kirby. Martin Logan was one of the founders of the Richland United Presbyterian church. He had four children, Joseph A. ; Mrs. Jane INIcClurkin, deceased, of Iowa; Carrie, who married Hugh Logan and who is the mother of Mrs. C. M. Beale, the wife of Dr. C. M. Beale, and Dr. John Beale, a graduate of Oxfcwd University, and for some time a student with Doctor Johnson at Clarksburg, and now residing in Kansas. Martin Logan at one time walked from his home in Decatur county to College Corner, Ohio, in one day. It was an interesting fact that the com- ing of the Martins, Kincaids and Logans to Decatur county was occasioned by the reports given by Uncle Billy Anderson, who returned from the battle of Tippecanoe to his home in Kentucky through Decatur county, and here saw the fine land, and told these Kentucky families about what he saw. Nathan M. Logan's wife, to whom he was married on May 24, 1881, and who before her marriage was Rebecca Martin, is the daughter of David and Mary (Kincaid) Martin, the former of whom was born in 1833, and who died in 1896, in Decatur county. David Martin was the son of David Martin, St., of Kentucky, who came to Fugit township in 1821. Mrs. Ernest D. Power, who, as heretofore stated, was the eldest child born to Mr. and Mrs. Nathan M. Logan, is one of three children. The others are Luther Martin, born in 18S7, and who died on January 29, 1902; the third child, Mary, who was born on August 18, 1893, was graduated from Mon- mouth College in 191 5, the same institution as that attended by her sister. Both the Power family and the Logan family are members of the United Presliyterian church at Springhill. Nathan M. Logan, who has been a Republican and Prohibitionist is now identified with the Progressive party, and votes for the best man at the polls. Ernest D. Power is independent politically. No prettier nor more attractive spot can be found in Decatur county than the Fugit township farm of Ernest D. Power. Mr. Power is proud of this farm, as he has every right to be, and the people of Fugit township are also proud of it, as they also have a right to be. Not only do- DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 685 they point with pride to the beauty of this farm, but the people of this town- ship admire the rugged honesty, well-rounded efficiency and genial person- ality of its owner and one of their foremost citizens. JOHN .C. POWNER. John C. Powner is entitled to rank among the conservative and hon- orable farmers of Washington township, Decatur county, Indiana, and owns a farm consisting of fifty-two acres, two miles southwest of Greensburg. Born in 1855 in Jackson township, Decatur county, Indiana, John C. Powner is a son of John H. and Jane (Wynkoop) Powner, the former of whom was born in Franklin county, Indiana, in 1824, the son of John C. Powner, Jr., who was born in 1788, probably in Pennsylvania, and who came from sturdy Pennsylvania-Dutcii stock. The grandfather came to Franklin county, Indiana, in an early day, and in the early fifties came from Franklin to Decatur county, Indiana, with his son, John H. Powner. They settled in Jackson township, and engaged in the mercantile business in Sar- dinia for about two years. In 1853 they sold this store and rented a farm near Sardinia, but lived there only one year, after which they purchased one hundred and twenty acres north of Forest Hill, in Clay township, and here the elder Powner lived until his death, in May, 1905. John H.- Powner, the father of John C, was one of the substantial citizens of Clay township, and a man who took great interest in his church. He was very successful in his business, liberal and broad-minded in his views, and a keen student of public affairs. He was a stanch and true Democrat, and not only was a Democrat politically, but was a Democrat in his per- sonal manners and habits, and known far and near for his generous hospi- tality. His wife, who before her marriage, was Jane Wynkoop, was born in Franklin count3^ Indiana, about 1834, and died in February, 1905. John H. Powner and wife were the parents of four children, Mrs. Mary (Black) Helde, a resident of Alabama; John C, the immediate subject of this review; Dewitt Clinton, of Greensburg, and Mrs. Jennie M. \^^ilson. deceased. John C. Powner was born in 1855 in Jackson township, and lived at home with his parents until his marriage to Frances Eubanks in 1875. Mrs. Powner is a daughter of George and Catherine (Wright) Eubanks, who were natives of A'irginia. George Eubanks first moved to Decatur county and afterward became a farmer in Clay county, Indiana, where he died in 686 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 1876. Mr. Eubanks died in Washington township at the home of a daughter, Nancy C. Templeton. Mr. and Mrs. Eubanks were members of tlie Liberty Baptist church. They were the parents of four children. After his marriage, Mr. Powner hved on his father's farm until 1877, when he purchasetl fifty-two acres of land near the Liberty church, where he and his wife lived for four or five years, tilling the land at a profit, and purchasing what was known as the David Ward farm of eighty acres. After remaining on the latter farm for a period of five or six years, Mr. Powner moved to a farm north of GreensLurg, renting land for a short time, afterward moving to Greensburg, where he purchased property at Forest Hill. Still later the family moved to a farm owned by Mr. Powner's father, and in 1902 purchased the land where he is now living. John C. Powner is one of Decatur county's representative farmers and citizens. He is practically retired from farm life at the present time, but still takes an active interest in the operation of his farm, which he rents to others. He is a Democrat. 1jut is more thoroughly a patriot than a parti- san, and is liberal and broad-minded in his views of men and things. He is a good farmer, a good neighbor and a good citizen. Mrs. Powner is a mem- ber of Liberty Baptist church. AARON L. LOGAN. The name of Aaron Logan stands out conspicuously among the resi- dents of Decatur county as that of a successful farmer and a valuable citizen. All of his undertakings have lieen actuated by noble motives and high resolves and are characterized by breadth of wisdom and strong individual- ity. His success represents only the result of utilizing his native talents. At the present time he owns a productive farm of two hundred and fourteen acres, three-quarters of a mile west of Greensburg, on Columbus pike. Aaron Logan was born in 1841, on the old Logan homestead, about one mile from Greensburg, west, and is the son of Samuel and Susannah (Howard) Logan, the former of whom was born in Greensburg, Pennsyl- vania, in 1795, and who came to Decatur county with Colonel Ireland from Ireland and Colonel Hendricks, and entered land one mile from Greensburg, now known as the Logan farm. Susannah Howard was born on Paddies run in Ohio in 1805. Samuel Logan first came to Decatur county and entered land and then returned to Pennsylvania. On his way back to Indiana DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 68/ from Pennsylvania he stopped in Ohio and was married, and then finished his trip with his young hvkle. Here they hved the remainder of their hves, he dying in 1879. They were members of the Presbyterian church and he was a Hfe-long Democrat, a man of strong character and high-minded con- viction. Accustomed to hunt bears in the region around Greensburg, Samuel Logan and Colonel Hendricks killed a bear on the spot where the Greens- burg waterworks is now situated. He and his wife started in life very poor, but Samuel Logan was a money-maker. He accumulated a considerable fortune. On his way across the Alleghany mountains from Pennsyh'ania, having started with a wagon and one horse, he traded with various people along the way until, upon his arrival, he owned six horses. Samuel and Susannah (Howard) Logan had nine children, James, John. Mrs. Martha ,Vnne Hitt, I\Irs. Jane Deen and Mrs. Rachel Holjbs, are deceased; the latter was the wife of Alvin L Hobbs, of Des Moines, Iowa; Mrs. Mary Hamilton, the wife of Morgan Hamilton, is also deceased. Those living are Samuel Logan, Jr., who lives at Letts in Clay township; Aaron, the subject of this sketch, and Frank, of Topeka, Kansas. Aaron Logan began life for himself after having reached his majority, and for about three years was engaged in cultivating the old home place. After this he purchased ninety-two acres of land out of what was known as the old Hillis farm, which is now owned by William Holcher. Later, how- ever, Mr. Logan sold that farm and purchased the land where he now lives. He has always made a good living for himself and family and has always enjoyed the best things of life. In fact, there are few people living in Wash- ington township who enjoy life more than Aaron Logan. He himself says that he gets more enjoyment out of what he can buy with a dollar than in keeping the dollar itself and for its own sake. I\Ir. Logan was married early in life to Susannah Simmons, who lived near Greensburg, and who is the daughter of Edward and Polly (Howard) Simmons, both natives of Ohio, and of Scotch-Irish descent. Mr. and Mrs. Logan have had two children, Walter Scott Logan, who died at the age of thirty-eight, was an engineer on the Big Four railroad for fifteen years, and Sherman married Cora Patten, who is deceased, and by her had one child, Clyde L.. liorn in igoi, who lives with his father. The Logan family have been Democrats for the most part for several generations, and Aaron Logan is no exception to the rule. He is in fact a loyal and faithful Democrat, interested in the welfare of his party. Mr. Logan is well kmnvn in Washington township, and has always enjoyed the confidence of his neighbors and fellow citizens. Mrs. Logan is a member of the Christian church. •688 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. CHARLES I. AIXSWORTH. Decatur county has few institutions of which it is prouder than the Odd Fellows Home at Greensburg, Indiana. It happens that it was one of Greensburg's well-known citizens who had a coinmendable and active part in the erection of this splendid home, and who for seven years was on the man- aging board of the home during the period of its construction. Charles I. Ainsworth, who is a member of Decatur Lodge No. 103, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, and who has passed all the chairs in this fraternity, per- sonally superintended the erection of all but the first building, and it was his genius, coupled with his keen and abiding interest in the fraternity as a whole, that has resulted in the erection of the buildings which make up this splendid institution. In most every large community there are, in fact, men who are willing to devote their, time and energy and genius to such worthy public enterprises, and these are the men who leave the mark of their indi- viduality upon the community where they have lived and labored. Mr. Ains- worth is a man of this type. Charles I. Ainsworth, whose paternal ancestry, three generations back, came from England, a veteran of our greatest war, a man who, as a school teacher and farmer, has had many interesting experiences in life, is a native of Kentucky. He was born in Nicholas county on August 5, 1843, the son of Tillman and Nancy (West) Ainsworth, the former of whom was born in Lexington, Kentucky, in 1815, came to Decatur county in 1855 and died in 1887. Upon coming to Washington township he rented land and engaged in operating a stone quarry two miles south of Greensburg, in which con- nection he also operated a grist-mill, and after being engaged in this busi- ness for fifteen years, in the fall of 1863 he moved to Illinois and engaged in the mercantile business at St. Elmo, where he died. He was the son of Charles Ainsworth, a native of England. His wife, Nancy West, who was also born in Kentucky, in 1817, died two years before her. husband, in 1885. They had three children: Charles I., the subject of this sketch; Mary A., deceased, and Andrew M., who lives at Yuma, Arizona. It is to be remembered that Charles I. Ainsworth was only twenty years old at the time of his removal from Decatur county with his parents to St. Elmo, Illinois. In the meantime he had received such education as the schools of Washington township, Decatur county, afforded at that time. During this period the Civil War was being fought between the Northern and South- ern states, and two years after going to Illinois, in February, 1865, Mr. CHARLES I. AINSWOKTH. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 689 Ainsvvorth enlisted in Company F, Seventh Illinois Cavalry, at St. Elmo, in that state. After sen'ing three months, he was discharged, the war having come to a close. During the period of his enlistment he was on detached service and sutfered from illness a considerable portion of the time. Return- ing from the seat of war, he located at Springfield, Illinois. After teaching in the Illinois public schools for some time, Mr. Ains- worth worked in a store in Vandalia for one year and then engaged in fann- ing one hundred and eighty acres for two years. He moved back to Decatur county and settled in Jackson township in the spring of 1867, where he pur- chased a farm of one hundred and sixty acres with the money he had received from the sale of his one-hundred-and-eighty farm in Illinois. After liv- ing two years in Jackson township, he purchased a farm two miles south of Greensburg in Washington township and resided on this farm of one hun- dred and seventy-six acres from 1870 to 1911, a period of forty-one years. In 191 1 Mr. Ainsworth moved to Greensburg and purchased splendid resi- dence property on North Michigan avenue, where he now lives. On September 13, 1865, after the close of the Civil War, Mr. Ains- worth was married to Rachel M. Kitchin, who was born on October 15, 1843, in Decatur county and who is the daughter of Thomas and Sarah L. (Boone) Kitchin, natives of Ohio and Kentucky, respectively. The former was a son of Joseph Kitchin, a native of Pennsylvania, who migrated to Ohio, coming thence to this county in an early day. Joseph Kitchin was a farmer and blacksmith and also a pioneer minister in the Methodist church. He was born in 1770 and died in Decatur county in 1858. His children were: Thomas, John, Bryce, Sarah and Maria. Thomas Kitchin, who was born in Ohio in 1818, immigrated to Decatur county with his brothers in 1839. He spent a part of his life in that county and a part in Boone county, dying in 1904. His wife, who before her marriage was Sarah Luffborough Boone, was a daughter of Brumfield Boone, a native of Kentucky and a son of Thomas Boone, a soldier in the Revolutionary War. The children of Thomas and Sarah L. Kitchin were Mrs. Charles I. Ainsworth, Joseph B. and Frank B. On her mother's side Mrs. Ainsworth is a relative of Daniel Boone. Mr. and Mrs. Charles I. Ainsworth have had eight children: Dr. Charles Bruce, a veterinary surgeon of Greensljurg : Ira M., a rural mail carrier of Greensburg: Clara Ellen, who married Watson Gilmour and lives two miles east of Greensburg on a farm; Hattie Antoinette, the wife of Dr. C .B. Weaver, of Henry county; Jessie Pearl, the wife of Jacob Sherer, who (44) 690 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. lives two miles east of Greensburg on a farm ; Frank K., who lives on the home fami; Mrs. Grace Edkins, who lives one-half mile south of Greens- burg, and Wayne T., who lives on the home farm. An independent Republican in politics, Charles I. Ainsworth has never been an office-seeker, and has served only in minor positions, having been a member of the township advisory board at one time. Mr. and Mrs. Ains- worth and family are members of the First Methodist Episcopal church at Greensburg, in which he is a tmstee. Fraternally, he is, as heretofore men- tioned, a member of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, and in this order, largely because the Odd Fellows Home was erected at Greensburg, and because of the large part he had in its construction, he has devoted most of his interest and attention during recent years to this home. Mr. Ains- worth is also a member of the Free and Accepted Masons, Lodge No. 36, and of Pap Tliomas Post, Grand Anny of the Republic, No. 75. Mr. and Mrs. Charles I. Ainsworth are held in high regard and esteem by the peo- ple of Greensburg and Decatur county. They have reared a large family to honorable and useful lives, but, more than this, Mr. Ainsworth has never found the cares of his private business so great that he could not take a worthy interest in commendable public enterprises. His greatest public work, perhaps, is the Greensburg Odd Fellows Home, which will stand as a monument to his memory long after he has departed this life. MILLARD A. HUDSON. Among the citizens of Washington township, Decatur county, Indiana, who have built up comfortable homes and surrounded themselves with val- uable personal and real property, few have attained a higher degree of suc- cess than Millard A. Hudson, who is the owner of one hundred and forty- one acres of land, two and one-half miles from Greensburg. on the old Michigan road, and in that section of Decatur county noted for the fertility of its soil. With few opportunities except what his own efforts were capable of mastering, and with many discouragements to overcome, he has made an exceptional success in life, and also has the gratification of knowing that the community where he resides has benefited by his presence and his coun- sels. IMillard A. Hudson, who was born at Napoleon, Decatur county, In- diana, in 1858, is a son of Charles W. and Nancy (Bccraft) Hudson, the DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 69 1 former of whom was born in Jefferson county, Indiana, in 1833, and who came to Decatur county in 1853, where he married, settHng on a farm near A'apoleon, and remained for five or six years, and then moved to Greens- burg, where he engaged in the shoemaker trade until about three or four years prior to his death, when he removed to a farm which he had purchased from his savings, and where he Hved with his son until his death in 1878. The grandfather of Mr. Hudson was born during the War of 1812, in Virginia, and died at the age of seventy-five years in Decatur county. Charles W. Hudson was a soldier in the Civil War, serving during the latter part of that great struggle as a member of the One Hundred and Thirty-fourth Regiment, Indiana \''olunteer Infantry. He was a stanch Republican in politics after the formation of that party, while before that time he was an ardent Whig and later in life a Democrat. He was a great student of philosophy. Mr. Hudson attended the Christian church, and few men in his neighborhood knew as much about the Bible as he. Nevertheless, he was liberal in his \'iews, broad-minded and charitable. At the beginning of his career, Millard A. Hudson was engaged in farming for five years for Zell Kirliy, and afterward engaged in the busi- ness of photography in Greensburg, owning the leading gallery in the city. After conducting a successful business in this line for a number of years, his health failed, when on this account he was compelled to return to the farm. He then farmed on shares for Miss Kirby until her death, when he purchased the farm of one hundred and forty-one acres, where he is now living and where he makes a specialty of raising corn, cattle and hogs. He has on the farm a splendid vitrified tile silo, which, as much as anything, proves the progressive spirit with which he farms. When Mr. Hudson pur- chased the farm he paid eighty-seven dollars an acre for the land, incurring an indebtedness of ten thousand dollars, for which he was compelled to pay five and one-half per cent, interest. In less than ten years he has suc- ceeded in entirely discharging this indeJjtedness. So thoroughly did Mr. Hudson enjoy the esteem and confidence of the people of his community that he was able to borrow money on his own note without security. Now that the farm is paid for, Mr. Hudson intends to build a modern home, thoroughly equipped with every modern device and for every modern pro- cess in farming. Millard A. Hudson has never married. His sister Alice supervises the home and they are now living in happiness and comfort on the farm. Mr. Hudson is a fine type of citizen, and has made good in the face of adversity, as men who start with nothing and who, by their industry, economy and 692 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. good management, gather up fortunes, deser\-e far more credit than those who are favored with inheritance or other aid. Millard A. Hudson deserves the very highest credit for his accomplishments and his achievements. He is a member of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows at Greensburg, is a strong Prohibitionist and attends the Christian church at Greensburg. ISAAC VV. WHITE. Isaac W. White, a retired citizen and property owner who has li\-ed in Greensburg for more than half a century, is one of the highly respected citizens of Decatur county. A veteran of the Civil War, he performed valiant service in behalf of the American Union. While he was successful in busi- ness, he perhaps did not accumulate as much property as some other men. Isaac W. White, who was born in Delaware county in 1S42, is the son of John D. and Louisa (Earls) White, the former of whom was a native of Dearborn county, born in April, 1818, and the son of John White, a nati\e of \'irginia, whose father was born in Ireland, and who came to America some time before the American Revolution. John D. \\liite was a prosperous farmer of Delaware county, to which he moved in about 1867, and where he lived until his death in 1895. He accumulated considerable property and was a respected citizen. He was identified with the Demo- cratic party but, being a strong Union man. voted for Abraham Lincoln. After the war, however, he returned to his former party allegiance, and remained loyal until his death. He was a member of the Baptist church and a liberal-minded man. His wife, who before her marriage was Louisa Earls, was born in Kentucky, the daughter of a shipbuilder, who lived at Falmouth, thirty miles above Cincinnati. He died of cholera at his home in 1832. The Earls were an old and prominent family of Kentucky, probably of English origin. It is said of Grandmother White that she molded bullets while the men shot the Indians. In May, 1862, Isaac W. White joined the Fifty-fourth Regiment, In- diana Volunteer Infantry, and served three months. After his discharge, he joined the Fifty-fourth again and, after a year's service, joined the One Hundred and Thirty-fourth Regiment, Indiana Volunteer Infantry, recruited at Greensburg and commanded by Colonel Gavin. He served until the end of the war and after his discharge, came home and worked in a grocery DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 693 store for one year, after which he began working at his trade as a painter and interior decorator and enjoyed an extensive patronage. In Angust, 1865, Isaac \Y. \Vhite was united in marriage to Martha Ann Lloyd, daughter of Creath Lloyd, to which union one child was born, who died in infancy. Mrs. White died on September 8, 1866, and Mr. White married, secondly, Mary Johnson, daughter of Charles Johnson, a native of Kentucky and a highly-respected citizen of this county, to which union three children were born, namely: Laura B., wife of William Kiener, of Paducah, Kentucky ; Charles, a well-known resident of Greensburg, this county, and Lulu, who died young. The mother of these children died in 1875 and on January 22. 1878, Mr. White was united in marriage to Nannie J. Lloyd, a cousin of his first wife and the daughter of Carter and Nancy (Cooper) Lloyd, natives of North Carolina, to which union eight children were born, as follow: John D., who lives at Connersville, Lidiana; Jesse C, also of Connersville ; Nellie, who married Albert Lacy, of Greensburg, this county ; Isaac W.. who is a soldier in the United States regular army, now stationed at Tientsin, China; Albert F., who lives at Greensburg; Mary, who married James Ray, of Greensburg; Thomas, deceased, and one who died in infancy. Mr. \Vhite is a well-respected citizen of Decatur county. He is a pro- gressi\'e, broad-minded citizen and a member of the Grand Army of the Republic. JAMES N. ANNIS. Among the veterans of the Civil War and retired citizens now living in Greensburg, Indiana, is the venerable James N. Annis, who was born in Grant county, Kentucky, in 1844, the son of Charles and Permelia (Kidwell) .Annis. the former of whom was a native of Virginia, born near Culpeper. He was a son of William Annis, also a native of Virginia and the Annis family were among the first settlers of that state, coming of English stock. Permelia Kidwell was a native of Kentucky and a daughter of Leonard and Ann (Stafford) Kidwell, both of whom were born and reared in North Carolina. They also were probably of English origin and were an old family in the state of North Carolina. Charles Annis was brought by his jjarents from Virginia to Kentucky when he was about eight years old, where he grew to manhood and was married, living and dying in that state, in which he became a farmer and a stonemason. He was a Whig until 1856, when the Republican party was 694 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. organized, and then became identified \\ith this party, remaining loyal to it until his death in 1879. He and his wife had thirteen children, of whom J. N., the subject of this sketch, was the eighth and the only one now living. The venerable J. N. x\nnis grew to manhood in Kentucky and when the Civil War broke out, enlisted in Company G, Eighteenth Regiment, Ken- tucky Volunteer Infantry, commanded by Col. W. A. Warner, in which company and regiment he served until the close of the war. This regiment, which saw very hard service, was attached to the Army of the Cumberland under Generals Thomas and Rosencrans. The first battle in which it par- ticipated was at Richmond, Kentucky, on August 30, 1862. The}- then went to Fort Donelson but arrived too late for serious service in that battle. From Fort Donelson the regiment went to Carthage, Tennessee, and thence to Murfreesboro and Hoover's Gap, Tennessee, and were then engaged in various skirmishes with Bragg's army. Through Tennessee the arni\- marched to Georgia and engaged in the battle of Chickamauga, after which the regi- ment fell back to Chattanooga and there they were besieged by General Bragg's army and almost star^^ed out. Subsequently, the battle of Mission Ridge was fought and this, indeed, was a fierce engagement. Shortly after- ward, the regiment was attached to Sherman's army and marched with him from Atlanta to the sea. At the battle of Chickamauga, during a lull in the fighting, Mr. Annis and two or three of his comrades were standing in line when a rebel sharpshooter stepped from behind a tree and fired at a distance of about four hundred yards. The bullet plowed up the dirt at Mr. Annis' feet. Instantly the sharpshooter was killed. Late in the war, Mr. Annis was taken sick with the measles and confined in the hospital only eight days. On April 4, 1865, he was mustered out of service at Goldsboro, North Carolina, when he proceeded to \\"ashington, where he was paid off and discharged on April 14, 1865, the same day on which President Lincoln was assassinated. After the close of the Civil War, Mr. Annis returned to his Kentucky home and about a year later, on March 8, 1866, he was married to Nancy J. Powell, the daughter of James and Cynthia (Barnhill) Powell, and began life on the farm. He was engaged in farming in Kentucky until 1875, when he and his family came to Decatur county, Indiana, settling on a farm in Jackson township, where they lived for about fifteen years and then moved to a farm in Washington township, where they lived for two years. Subsequently, they lived in Clay township for five years. In 1897 they mo\'ed to Greensburg, where the family is still living. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 695 Mr. and Mrs. Annis are the parents of two children, Mrs. Mary Ketner, of Bartholomew county, and Charles, of Lafayette. Mr. Annis identifies himself with the "Jo^ Cannon"' Republicans. He is a patriotic citizen and greatly interested in political aliairs, has always been prominent in the councils of his party and is on the firing line in most of its campaigns. Mr. and Mrs. Annis are members of the Christian church. He is a member of the Grand Army of the Republic, the Royal Arch Masons, the Union Veterans' League and other societies. He is a highly respected citizen of this city and a man who is well known throughijut Decatur county. Honorable and upright in all of the relations of life, he is highly respected. DANIEL DAVIS. Greensburg, Indiana, has the distinction of counting as one of her citizens the oldest living veteran of the Civil War in Indiana. This vener- able patriot and citizen is Daniel Davis, who is now living retired in this city, and who is now ninety years old. Born in 1825 in Hamilton county, Ohio, the venerable Daniel Davis is a son of Evan and Margaret Davis, the former of whom was a native of Wales and who came to America when a young man and settled in Cincinnati, Ohio. Later he came to Decatur county and settled on a farm. He was one of the first tanners in Decatur county and died in 1828. Daniel Davis began early in life to hustle for himself and from a ver)' early age was compelled to depend upon his own efforts and his own resources. He was bound to a man by the name of Clark in Ripley county and, when twenty-one years old, did not have a single dollar. He began life for himself by working out on a farm for sixteen dollars a month in Ripley county. On May 25, 1850, Mr. Davis was married to Matilda Jennings, a daughter of John Jennings, a native of England, who settled in Ripley county. Mrs. Davis was born in 1826 and died in August in 1900. Mr. and ]\Irs. Davis had two children, Edward L., and William H.,.a clerk in the postofBce, both of Greensburg. In May, 1861, the \'enerable Daniel Davis enlisted in the Sixteenth Regiment, Indiana \'oIunteer Infantry, commanded by Col. P. A. Hackle- man and Major Wolf. Attached to the Army of Western Virginia, he served until 1863, when he was discharged for disabilities and came home. 696 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Shortly after the end of the Civil War, in 1867, Mr. Davis moxxd to Greensburg,. Indiana, and engaged in the dairy business. A Republican in politics, he cast his first vote for John C. Fremont in 1856, and for many years was on the firing line of the political campaigns of this county- He has always been a drummer and has the oldest drum in the state of Indiana. He is a member of the Baptist church, the Grand Arm_\- nf the Re[)ul)lic and of the Masonic lodge at Greensburg. He owns land in Florida, near Jacksonville, but has never looked after the land personally. He is still a man of vigorous mental poise and well preserved for his years. For thirty years he has supplied the people of Decatur county with all kinds of plants and is well and familiarh* known as "Uncle Dan." JASON B. HUGHES. The late Jason B. Hughes, who represented the second generation of the Hughes family in America and who was a resident of Decatur county for more than a half century, was a Welshman by birth. His father, John Hughes, who was born on March 15, 1795, in Aberystwith, Cardiganshire, South Wales, sailed from Carnarvon, North Wales, in 18 17, to Baltimore, from which place he came to Pittsburgh. Pennsylvania, and assisted in build- ing the first bridge over the Monongahela river. After a time John Hughes came on to Cincinnati and located on a farm near Miami town, where he was married to Anna Jane Sefton in February, 1826. Six years later he came on to Decatur county, settling in Washington township, where he spent the remainder of his life. Jason B. Hughes, who is now deceased, was a nati\e-l)orn citizen of this great county, having been "born on the old Hughes homestead on April 2, 1844, which homestead had been established by his father, at McCoy Sta- tion, in Washington township, and here Jason B. Hughes lived from the time of his birth until his death, March 4, i()02. John Hughes, the father of Jason B., who lived a modest, quiet life far from the madding crowd's ignoble strife, was a pioneer in this section, having died at the age of ninety-three years, August 25, 1888. He was always possessed of a keen and intelligent mind and was known as a great reader, a man who maintained his faculties and energies in a high state of efficiency up to the time of his death. His early life had been filled with interesting experiences, which he liked very much to relate during his declin- JASOX 1!. Iir{;iIES. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 69/ ing years. In the meantime, he had hecome very prosperous, owning three hundred and twenty acres of land, most of which he had cleared with his own hands. Noted for his kindly, charitable disposition, he is remembered today with pleasant feelings by those who knew him. He was a man who always inipiired after his neighbors' welfare and assisted them in every pos- sible way to get on in the world. Of the seven children born to John and Anna Hughes, Jason B. was the youngest. The others were William, David, Sarah, Oscar, Thomas and Franklin. Oscar left two sons at the time of his death, Thomas and Chal- nier. Thomas also left two sons, Frank and John. Jason B. Hughes received his education in Decatur county. He received a portion of the old homestead farm, comprising eighty acres, at the time of his father's death, and, before his own death, increased this farm to one hundred and seventy-two acres. He was known far and wide as the inventor of the American Com Shuck Compressor, an in\'ention and device which enjoyed a phenomenal success. The late Jason B. Hughes was married on December 25, 1878, to Lou E. Stewart, who was born in Jefferson county. Indiana, on January 16, 1855, the daughter of John W. and Keziah (McCullough) Stewart. Her mother was a widow, who had one child by a former marriage to James Mc- Laughlin, Maria, and who, by her second marriage, had one daughter, Mrs. Hughes. Her husband, John \V. Stewart, was also tw^ce married, and l)y his first marriage there were eleven children. He died in i860. The widow and daughter mo\ed to Harts\ille, where Mrs. Hughes was graduated from the Hartsville College. After her graduation, she and her mother m(jved to Greensburg, where the latter died, February i, 1900, at the age of eighty- one years. Mrs. Hughes and her sister are members of the Christian church. Maria McLaughlin married Robert Mitchell, who died on December 15, 1892. .\11 the children nf the venerable John Hughes, a pioneer of Decatur county, are now deceased. .Among his grandchildren are Mrs. Lon Innis, a farmer, of Milroy, Indiana; Wilbur McCoy was postmaster for many years of Guthrie, Oklahoma ; Frank McCoy, an attorney at Omaha, Nebraska, and the children of Sarah McCoy. The late Jason B. Hughes was not only a fine type of the intelligent, industrious and self-made citizen, but he was a man of strong religious instincts, and throughout his life a devout member of the Presbyterian church. He never took much part in politics, but always cast his vote for the Republican candidate and in behalf of Republican prniciples. At the time of his death he left, besides his family, a host of friends in Decatur countv to mourn his loss. 698 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. OLIVER C. ELDER. Oliver C. Elder, a retired farmer of Greeiisburg, Lidiana, is a veteran of the Civil War and one who has an exceptionally splendid military record, even though he is very modest in accepting this record, a man still sturdy and strong for his age. On the first day of the battle of the Wilderness, while serving as orderly sergeant, he look the place of the lieutenant in command. All of the commissioned officers of his company, having been killed, he retained command of the company until just before the battle of Petersburg. One of four brothers who served in the cause of the Union during the Civil War, he is the' grandson on his paternal side of a soldier in the Revolutionary W'ar. His brother, James, was captured and held as a Confederate prisoner in Andersonville, Florence, Salisbury and Charleston for a period of nine months. 01i\'er C. Elder, who is one of the highlj- respected older citizens of this county and a native of Washington township, was born on November 27, 1843, o"s ™'ls south and two miles east of Greensburg, the son of William JM. and Sarah S. (Sellers) Elder, natives of Kentucky, who moved to Decatur count}" in 1S2O, shortly after it was open for settlement. Born in January, 1802, William JNI. Elder entered one hundred and sixty acres of land in Decatur' county, after coming here in 1826 and later purchased an eighty- acre tract from his brother. He had four brothers, Matthew, James, Andrew and Roliert. Leaving the farm in 1863. he mo\ed to Greensburg because four of his sons were engaged in- the service of their country in the Civil War and he had no assistance with which to operate the farm. Of his ten chil- dren, three died in infancy and seven lived to maturity. Five of these seven children, Mrs. IMary C. \'awter, ]\Irs. America Gray, Mrs. Sarah Taylor, George and Henry are now deceased, and the living children are Oliver and James Marshall. The last four served in the Civil War. James Marshall resides at Highland Center, Iowa. The mother of these children having died in May, 1855, the father was married again to Eliza Ford and by this second marriage had two children, Mrs. Serena Hamilton, of Iowa, and Mrs. Zerura Griffey, of Indianapolis. The father died on April 8, 1875- After li\-ing at home with his parents until the breaking out of the Civil War, when he was eighteen years old, Oliver C. Elder enlisted on August 2^, 1861, in Company E, Se\-enth Regiment, Indiana Volunteer Infantry, under Col. E. B. Dumont and Capt. Ira Grover, serving until Sep- DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 699 tember 20, 1864. He was in the principal Ixittles'of 1861-62 in western Virginia and Shenandoah Valley and the Army of the Potomac during 1863-64. After the war, Mr. Elder returned home and engaged in farming until 1903, when he moved to Greensburg. Beginning with two tracts of land, comprising two hundred and forty acres and one hundred and fifty-four acres, Mr. Elder now owns two hundred and thirty acres in one tract and sixty acres in another. On January 28, 1868, four years after his return home from the army, Mr. Elder was married to Sophronia Cobb, the daughter of Dyer Cobb and a granddaughter of Joshua Cobb, one of the very first pioneers in Washing- ton township, Decatur county, Joshua Cobb having settled in Decatur county in the fall of 1820 on the old Michigan trail, married Almira Tremain, of New York state. Of the five children born to Mr. and Mrs. Elder, two are deceased. The three living children are. Orris Clifford, who lives on the home farm; Mrs. Edna Meek, the wife of Edmund L. Meek, of Clinton township, and Jessie A., who lives at home. Mr. Elder is a Republican. He and his wife and family are members of the Christian church. He is a member of Pap Thomas Post, Grand Army of the Republic, and of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows. SAM V. LITTELL. One of the established institutions of Greensburg, Indiana, which has become famous throughout Decatur and adjoining counties, is the lunch room and grocery conducted by Samuel V. Littell. The. fame of this historic old bakery, lunch room and grocery rests partly upon a famous pie, which was invented and baked here for a long time. The lunch room com- prises from eight to ten tables, and on gala days from fifteen hundred to two thousand people take their meals there. There is scarcely a man li\ing in Greensburg or Decatur county who does not recall some interesting experience or incident connected with the Sam Littell grocery and lunch room. Thirty years ago the famous "Washington" pie was first made. This pie consisted of meat, bread, cakes, fruit, spices and New Orleans molasses, and was baked in huge pans. During the last few years, however, pie baking has been discontinued, the volume of the business having become so great 700 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. tliat it was necessary to either discontinue pie baking or enlarge the quarters of the store. Sam V. Littell. well-known restaurant keeper and grocer of Greensburg, was born in Ripley county in 1859, the son of Benjamin and Jane M. (Van- zandtj Littell. At the age of two years he was brought to Greensburg, Indiana), Ijy his parents, where he grew up and was educated in the com- mon and high schools. At the end of his school days in 1876, Mr. Littell began clerking in the grocery store of which he is now the owner and which was then owned by his brother, B. F. Littell. Here he served his apprenticeship, lasting about eight years, and learned the business. Later he purchased a half interest in the business with another brother, William T. Littell. This arrangement continued for four years, when he sold out and entered the partnership with another br(_itber, James S. Littell. This partnership con- tinued six years and was discontinued when Sam took over the entire business. It is now occupied exclusively by Sam V. Littell. He has been in business for himself for about twenty years, and has been very successful. His volume of business is equal or suijerior to that of any other grocery or lunch room in Decatur county. In point of years, he probably has been engaged in this business as long as any other man in Indiana. He entered the store, of which he is now the proprietor and sole owner, when si.xteen years of age, and with the exception of eight months, A\hen he was in the hospital, has never been out of this store. In years gone by the Littell grocery and lunch room has fed as high as two thousand people in a single day. Mr. Littell likes the business, and especially the lunch room. In the ])ast he has probalily fed more people than all the hotels and lunch rooms of Greensburg combined. In September, 1887, Sam V. Littell was married to Lida Howard, a daughter of Jesse and Mary ( Ewing ) Howard, the latter of whom was the daughter of Patrick Ewing, the founder oi the famous Ewing family in this county, whose life and works are recounted elsewhere in this volume, and who has many descendants living in Decatur county today. Mr. and Mrs. Littell have had two children, Mary, who was born in 1888, and Howard, in 1892. Sam V. Littell has always been identified with the Republican party and has always taken a commendable interest in politics, especially as a good citizen. Fraternally, he is a member of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows. \ DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 7OI It will be many long years before the life and career of Sam V. Littell will be forgotten by the people of Greensburg and Decatur county. Here in this city his place of business is one of the most famous and he has always enjoyed a large patronage and a profitable and successful trade because he knows the business and the wants and needs of the public. He has been honest and fair in all the relations of life, and no man living in this county is more popular than he. REUBEN SMALLEY. In the city of Greensljurg, Indiana, lives a distinguished citizen and veteran of the Ci\'il War, who today carries a medal of honor for distin- guished services in several battles, which was presented to him by an act of Congress during Cleveland's administration. This valiant and brave soldier, a veteran of our greatest war, is Reuben Smalley, who was born in 1839 in Steuben county. New York, the son of Elias and Rozelphia (Hawkins) Smalley. Reuben Smalley was but about twenty-three years of age when, on August 15, 1862. he joined Company F, Eighty-third Regiment, Indiana Volunteer Infantr)', and leaving his wife and two small children, answered his country's call for volunteers. After drilling for six weeks at Lawrence- burg, Indiana, this regiment joined Grant's army at Cairo, Illinois, and here ijoarded a steamboat and proceeded to Memphis, Tennessee. From Memphis they went to Azoo swamp in Mississippi, where they attacked the Confederate forces, having later taken eight thousand prisoners at Arkansas Pass. Immediately after this the Fifteenth Army Corps built the Butler canal. In the following spring they took part in the \'icksburg campaign. This fortress they surrounded on May 19, 1863, and it was in this siege that Mr. Smalley first distinguished himself. The siege of Vicksburg lasted from May 19, until July 4, and on May 22, Grant called for volunteers to lead the way into Vicksburg, where Mr. Smalley was promoted for gallantry. Mr. Smalley was one of the one hundred and fifty to volunteer. At Fort Pennington, he distinguished himself for bravery and wears the badge of honor for services in that battle, a medal of which he is very proud. After the surrender of \'ickslnirg, the army started to march to Jackson, Mississippi, and met General Joe Johnson's army at Black River, Mississippi, which they defeated and followed him into Jackson, where they defeated liim again. Later they came back to Memphis, Tennessee, and from there 702 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. marched to Chattanooga, which march was marked by skirmishes with For- ester's cavalry. At Chattanooga Mr. Smalley took part in the battle of Mis- sionary Ridge, at which time he was acting as first sergeant. After pursu- ing Johnson for some time, the army went into winter quarters and in the spring Grant's army joined Slierman's. Then followed the famous cam- paign of Slierman, with which every one is familiar. Reuben Smalley was with his army throughout this campaign and marched with it from Atlanta to the sea. He was once taken prisoner, but, as he says, no one could lujld him in those days, and as his captor had not taken the precaution to disarm him, he relates that after marching along quietly for about three hundred yards, he decided it was time to do some- thing and the time had come to determine whose hide was the tougher. In the struggle, his gun somehow came in contact with the rebel's head and — well, Reuben Smalley joined his command. He never missed being in any battle which it was possiljle to engage in. Fort McAllister was the last hard battle in which he was engaged. Finally he was present at the surrender of Johnson to Sherman, which was one of the incidents marking the close ot the war. Of Mr. Smalley's parentage, it may be said that his father was a native of France who came to America, and, after arriving in this country, set- tled in New York state. He died when Reuben was a lad of three years. When he was seven years old, he came to Jennings county, Indiana, with an uncle, with whom he lived until seventeen, at which time he began the business of life for himself. Two years later, at the age of nineteen, he was married to Martha Ann Johnson, the daughter of Elijah and Nancy (Bowley) Johnson, the former of whom was a native of Decatur county, Indiana, and the latter of whom was a native of Vermont. Married in Ripley county, July 23, 1859, Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Smalley lived in that county until the beginning of the Ci\il War. After the war, Mr. Smalley came back to Ripley county and, after two vears, he and his wife, his two children having died while he was fightine for the cause of his country, immigrated to Decatur county. Mr. Smalley has been enipli;)yed on railroad construction work for several years as a sta- tionary engineer. He has been a shrewd business man and successful in life. An enthusiastic member of the Grand Army of the Republic, Reuben Smalley is a man of remarkable vitality and striking personality. He is well known and highly respected in this community and in surrounding counties. The medal of honor, which he wears for distinguished services and bravery at the siege of Vicksburg and elsewhere, is something of which DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 7O3 he is extremely proud and for which he has every right to be. In 1914 he was elected constable on the Republican ticket by a majority of three hun- dred and fifty-two votes. Several years ago he had been elected to the same office. Mr. and Mrs. Smalley are a pleasant couple. She is seventy-three and her husband is seventy-six. With the exception of occasional heart trouble, both are still vigorous in body and mind and take a keen delight in livino-. JOHN W. BECK. The art of photography has reached such a state of perfection that it would seem there is little to be desired. The work, although accoiupanied by a certain amount of uncertainty in each instance, up to a given point, gives the operator more solid enjoyment, than most any other we know of. John W. Beck, photographer, of Greensburg, Indiana, was born on March 30, 1865, in Jay county, Indiana, and is a son of Isaac and Millicent (Reeve) Beck. He was reared and educated in Columbiana and Mahoning counties, Ohio, including the schools at Canfield, Delaware, and Ohio Wes- leyan Universities. While attending the latter place, he was offered a position in Indiana, and came west, taught school for four years, and then became interested in photography at McKeesport, where he spent three years. He then came to Indiana, and has been here ever since. After living; for a time at Osgood, Knightstown, Carthage and Kokomo, he permanently set- tled at Greensburg, where he has built up a prosperous business and a large circle of warm friends. His political views are along the independent line, and in religion, he is a member of the Methodist Episcopal church. He began his career as a photographer in 1885, his present place of business having been established in 191 1, is known as Beck's studio. He has a fully equipped place and is prepared to do all kinds of inside and outside pho- tography, of the highest quality. Isaac and Millicent (Reeve) Beck, parents of our subject, were pio- neers in Jay county, Ohio, settling there at a time when the ground was wet and mushy, and where the former died, in 1865. The mother then took her five children back to the old home in eastern Ohio, where she was reared. Her children were, Jonas Marion, Ellen, Anna May, Isaac Edwin and John W. They were Quakers, and wore the Quaker garb. Their ancestors were "Friends" for several generations back. John W. Beck was married, December 25, 1891, to Dollie Smith, of Decatur county. They have had two children, Adene and Serlett. 704 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. JAMES B. ROBISON. The late James B. Robison, of Greensburg, Indiana, not only was a successful farmer and stockman, but he was a prominent citizen of Decatur county, whose voice was respectfully heard in any council, because it was always raised in support of the right. While his most conspicuous service, perhaps, was performed as a member of the Indiana General Assembly, of which he was a member for two sessions. 1881 and 1889, yet his most impor- tant public service was performed in the community where he lived so long and where he was so well known. Broad-minded in his \iews, liberal in spirit, simple and kind-hearted in his charity, he was loved by the people of Decatur county, and today his memory is revered, not only by his widow and his two living children, but by the host of men and women who knew him, for his goodness of heart and for his unselfish generosity. The late James B. Robison was enterprising as a private citizen, it is true, but he was public-spirited, which is even more important. More men of his type and spirit are needed today. As a skillful farmer and a shrewd and far-seeing business man, espe- cially in the purchase and sale of live stock, the late James B. Robison had no superiors and few equals in Decatur county. Born on June 12, 1834, in Fugit township, and the son of Andrew and Polly (Donnell) Robison, he passed away cjuietly on his golden wedding anniversary. May 19, 191 3. His father, a native of Pennsyhania and a tanner by trade, came to Decatur county during the early twenties, and lived and died on his farm in Fugit township. After his death, his son, the late James B. Robison, took charge of the homestead farm when he was only nineteen years old. James B. Robison was married. May 19, 1863, to Margaret Meek, who was born on December 25, 1844, and who is the daughter of John Meek, of the Springhill community, and the great-granddaughter of Thomas ]\Ieek, a pioneer in the state of Kentucky, whose descendants have lived to poi)ulate Decatur county with many of its mose enterprising citizens, its successful farmers, bankers and mechanics. Mr. and Mrs. Robison had three children : William E., who was born in Fugit township on July 31, 1864, married Clara Taintor, December 31, 1887, in Sterling. Illinois, the daughter of George L. and Martha (Hughes) Taintor. They live on the old Roliison homestead in Decatur county, and ha\'e three children, Mary, Margaret and Mildred; Stella, December 10, 1870, married Alva M. Reed, of Greensburg, January 21, 1891, and they now reside in Greensburg. They have one son. JAMES B. KOBISOX. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 7O5 Rollin Reed; Clara J., November 25, 1875, was married, April 2, 1902, to George Davis, and on October 30, 1909, she died in Alberta, Canada. One of the largest farmers and one of the most extensive stockmen of Decatur county, in 1896 the late James B. Robison removed from the farm to Greensburg, leaving his son, William E., in charge of the homestead. Later, however, he bought a farm near Greensburg, and personally superin- tended it until the time of his death. The late James B. Robison was not only a member of the Indiana Gen- eral Assembly for two terms, but, from 1906 to 1912, he served as a mem- ber of the Greensburg city council. In this office he used his best talents and energies for the promotion of enterprise, industry and wholesome living in this city. For more than a half century he was a well-recognized factor in all phases of life and was especially devout as a member of the Presby- terian church, having been an elder in the Kingston church from 1886 until the time of his death. To this church he not only gave his best personal services, but he also gave liberally of the means of which he was possessed, and which appeared without any apparent effort to grow from year to year. He regarded himself as a steward merely of the fortune which had come into his hands, and dispensed it with a liberality of one gifted with a patri- cian heart. GEORGE W. SEFTON. George \V. Sefton, a retired farmer of Greensburg, Indiana, is one of those men who, at the first call for volunteers at the breaking out of the Civil ^^'ar, enlisted in Company E, Seventh Regiment, Indiana V'olunteer Infantry, a reorganized regiment, and served for three years. In many hard- fought battles of the war, the only discomfiture he suffered, excepting the privations and hardships in the military service, was an attack of the measles. His brother, John, died of the measles while serving in the same regiment." Attached to the First Brigade of the First Division of the First and Fifth Army Corps, Mr. Sefton contracted rheumatism as early as January, 1862, and was confined in the hospital at Cuml>erland, Maryland, on account of measles. After his recovery, he brought his brother's body home and then rejoined his command at ^^"inchester, Virginia. He was discharged at Indianapolis on Septemlier 20, 1864. During his services, he was engaged in the battles of Greenbrier, Winchester, Bull Run, Fredericksburg, Gettysburg, (45) 706 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Spottsylvania, Cold Harbor, Aline Run, Wilderness, Campaign of 1864, Port Republic, Siege of Petersburg, Weldon Railroad, Antietam, South Mountain, Chancellorsville and many others. This is an honorable and valiant military record of which the subject of this sketch has reason to be. very proud. George W. Sefton was born on October 10, 1841, in Clinton township; Decatur county, Indiana, the son of Henry and Sarah (Brown) Sefton, natives of Ohio and Fountain county, respectively. The former, who was born in 1S08 and died in 1878, was the son of William Sefvon, a natix-e of Ireland, who came with his parents to Ohio, where he was reared. From Ohio he moved to Indiana and settled in Decatur county near Sandusky. Henry Sefton came with his parents and was reared in this county in the earlv twenties, and eventually settled in Clinton township, where he became a successful farmer. By his first wife, Sarah Brown, to whom he was mar- ried in 1848, he had six children, five of whom are now deceased. The only living child is George W., the subject of this sketch. The deceased children were: Preserve O. : William; John, who died of measles in the army; Elizabeth and Jane. By his second marriage to Sarah Stine, Henry Sefton had two children, Mrs. Rachel Wilkinson, of Sandusky, and Isaac Stine. who li\es on the home farm in Clinton township. Until March, 1903, George W. Sefton was engaged in farming. He owns one hundred and sixty acres in Clinton township. Mr. Sefton has been married three times, the first time on October 1, 1866, to Julia Lanham, who was born in 1843 and who was the daughter of Thomas and Elizabeth Lanham. She died in 1869, leaving two children, Monnett O., born on September 5, 1867, who lives in Rush county, and Julia E., on June z-j, 1869, who married John Frank Deem, of Adams town- shi|). By his second marriage, April 25, 1871, to Elizabeth Brock, who died in 1873, there were two children, Mrs. Emma M. Brown, of Indianapolis, who was born on May 4, 1S72, and Mrs. Mary E. Walker, of Newpoint, on October 7, 1873. ^7 his third marriage to Harriett Weed, September 19, 1876, one child, Mrs. Stella Waters, of Indianapolis, was born on Sep- tember 18, 1878. Mrs. Harriett (Weed) Sefton was born on July 16, 1847, near Milroy in Rush coynty and is the daughter of Alvin and Jane Ann (Ross) Weed, natives of Kentucky, the former of whom was born in 1810 and died in 1896, and the latter was born in 1814, died in 1886. .\lvin Weed was the son of a well-known pioneer citizen who was drowned while traveling down DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 707 the Ohio river in a flat-boat in 1812. Alvin Weed died in Howard county at the home of his son. His wife, who before her marriage, was Jane Aim Ross, was the daughter of Alexander Ross, a native of Ireland. Alvin and Jane Ann Weed had a large family of children, as follow : James Hiram, deceased; Eliza, deceased; Robert Thomas, deceased; Mrs. Lucinda Webster, of Hope, Indiana; Oliver, who died in infancy; Charles William, of Kokomo, Indiana; Mrs. Harriet Sefton, of Greensburg; Mrs. Melissa Margaret Oil- man, of Howard county; Mary Frances, deceased; Mrs. Alice Root, of Indianapolis ; Alonzo and John Lincoln, deceased. George W. Sefton cast his first vote for Abraham Lincoln and since that time has always voted the Republican ticket and upheld vigorously Republican principles and Republican candidates. Fraternally, he is a mem- ber of Pap Thomas Post No. 5, Grand Army of the Republic. Mrs. Sefton is a member of the Christian church. George W. Sefton is one of the honored and highly respected citizens of Greensburg and Decatur county and a man who is well known and well liked by his neighbors and fellow townsmen. HENRY THOMSON. Among the well-known citizens of Decatur county, Indiana, and among the veterans of the Civil War living in this county, is the venerable Henry Thomson, a retired farmer of Greensburg, Indiana, who was born on De- cember 16, 1840, in Washington township on a pioneer farm, and who is the son of William Henry and Eliza Jane (Hopkins) Thomson, the former of whom was born on January 11, 1803, and who died in August, 1840, and the latter of whom was born on March, 1809, in Kentucky, and who died, December 26, 1864. Henry Thomson had just reachetl his majority at the time of the breaking out of the Civil War, when he enlisted on September 5, 1861, in Company G, Seventh Regiment, Indiana Volunteer Infantry, serving until May 5, 1864, when he was wounded in the first day's battle of the Wilderness. Seriously wounded in the right leg, the effects of which are felt to this day, he was not dismissed until September 6, 1864. During his service as a soldier in the Civil War his principal engagements were those at Green Briar in 1861, Winchester in 1862, where he was wounded in the rieht shoulder, the second battle of Bull Run, Antietam, Fredericksburg, Virginia, Gettysburg, Manassas Gap and the Wilderness. In 1910 Mr. Thomson and 708 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. his good wife took an automobile trip over many of the battle scenes of the Civil War, taking along a complete camping outfit, and remaining away for several weeks. Starting on August 14, 1910, they did not return until September 11, and during this period visited nearly all of Air. Thomson's old battlefields. The father of Henry Thomson died before his son Henry was born, and the latter was reared in the home of his grandfather Hopkins. His father, who was born in Kentucky, was the son of James Henry Thomson, who was born on April 2, 1778, and who in turn was the son of James and Mary (Henry) Thomson, the former of whom was Ijorn in 1731, and the latter of whom was born in 1736. They had three children, as follow: Will- iam Henry, who was born in 1743; Elizabeth Davis, in 1750; James Henry, the grandfather of the subject of this sketch, April 2, 1778, and who was married to Sarah Henry, in 1776. James Henry and Sarah (Henry) Thomson had eight children, as follow: Almira, who was born in 1800, and who married the Reverend Mr. Lowry, the first pastor of the Presbyterian church at Kingston; Will- iam Henry, January 11, 1803, the father of the subject of this sketch; John Davis, April 7, 1805, and who married Susanna Howe; James Henry, October 26, 1807, and who married Nancy Ann McLeod; Alexander Brown, January 8, 1810, who first married Johanna S. Howe, September i, 1815, and for his second wife, Elizabeth R. Carson; Samuel Harrison, August 26, 181 3, was a professor at Hanover College for twenty-five years, and married Magdelena Sophronia Clifton; Preston Wallace, January 17, 1816; married Mary Ann Ashman; Mary Elizabeth, the last born, who first saw the light of day, June 2, 1818, married George F. Whitworth. William Henry, the father of Henry, was married to Eliza Jane Hop- kins, who was the daughter of John and Jane Hopkins, natives of Kentucky and early settlers in Washington township, Decatur county. John Hopkins became a judge of the appellate court, and was a man of abilit}- and great power. It was Judge John Hopkins who practically reared Henry Thomson, the subject of this sketch. Judge Hopkins died in 1852, and his wife in 1854, two years later. Mrs. Eliza Jane (Hopkins) Thomson died in 1864, on December 26. After the Civil War, Henry Thomson entered Hanover College, where he was a student for some time, but he later returned to the farm in Wash- ington township, and was actively engaged as a farmer until 1903, when, after a trip to the West, including the National Park, the Pacific coast. 1 DECATUR COUNTYj INDIANA. Jog Oregon, the Pacific coast cities, New Mexico, Arizona, and the Grand Canon of Colorado, he and his wife settled at their present home in Greenshurg, Indiana. The one-hundred-and-twenty-acre farm, with which he started life, in the meantime has been increased to one hundred and sixty acres. Air. Thomson still owns this farm, which is well improved. On December 15, 1881, Mr. Thomson was married to Laura Alice Mc- Cracken, who was born on January 31, 1852, and who is the daughter of Adam and Mary Jane (Rankin) McCracken, natives of Kentucky. Adam was the son of James and Sallie (Meek) McCracken, and was born on May 20, 1824, and died in 1901. His wife was the daughter of Adam and Hester (Logan) Rankin, natives of Kentucky, who settled at Springhill in Decatur county in the early twenties. Here they homesteaded a farm and it was here that the mother of Mrs. Thomson was reared. Adam McCracken and Mary Jane Rankin were married in 1851. The latter was born in 1827. Mrs. Thomson is one of three children born to her parents. The others were James Logan, who was born on January 9, 1858, and who lives at Wat- seka, Illinois, and Whilma, November 7, 1864, died, July 24, 1889. An ardent believer in temperance and in the suppression of the liquor traffic, Henry Thomson has been an active and influential member of the Prohibition party. Mr. and Mrs. Thomson are members of the Presbyterian church. Henry Thomson is a member of Pap Thomas Post, Grand Army of the Republic, at Greensburg, Indiana. JOHN WESLEY DEEM John Wesley Deem, a retired farmer and merchant of Greensburg, Indiana, whose active life dates back to the pioneer history of the Hoosier state, is a native of Preble county, Ohio, his birth having occurred on Novemljer 22. 1831. He is a son of Thomas and Sarah (Sayler) Deem, natives of Kentucky, whose family came originally from Virginia, and who removed from Kentucky to Ohio in an early day, and from that state to Indiana, settling in Decatur county in 1834, where they purchased land and Thomas Deem became a large landowner, possessing at one time five hun- dred acres. He was born on May 30, 1796, and died on September 24, 1833. His wife was born October 20, 1809, and died March 3, 1895. The Deem homestead, consisting of one hundred and sixty acres, was pur- 710 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. chased from Ella and Elizabeth Warriner, December 3, 1834, for nine hundred dollars. The deed was recorded on September 24, 1835. Thomas and Sarah (Sayler) Deem were the parents of ten children, whose names in the order of their birth are as follow : Mrs. Mary Ann Heaton, who was born on December 10, 1826, died on March 6, 1915; Mrs. Eliza A. Stewart, April 11, 1828, died in December, 191 1; Mrs. Catharine Dailey, the widow of E. G. Dailey, of Greensburg; Mrs. Elizabeth Hoodlow, of Topeka. Kansas, in 1829; Airs. Lenora Corey, November 22, 1830, lives on the old homestead; John Wesley, the immediate subject of this review; Lemuel, in 1836, is now deceased; Oliver, in 1840. lives in Greensljurg ; William Henry, in 1844, died in the service of his country during the Civil War, and Thomas Harvey, in 1847, ^i^-d in 1864, and was also a soldier in the Civil War. After his father had purchased the homestead farm, John Wesley Deem assisted in clearing the land, and did his share toward the improvement and cultivation of the home farm. The familv li\'ed at this time in a hewed log house, and experienced all the privations and hardships, as well as the joys of true pioneer life in southern Indiana. When he was twenty-four years of age, in 1855, John W. Deem removed to Shelby county, Indiana, where he lived for two years. During this period he and his wife li\ed in a round log cabin which was notched, daubed and chinked with mud. It consisted of one room, eighteen by fifteen feet, with one window and a door on the opposite side from the window. The chimney was built of mud and sticks with mud jambs and a clapboard roof. It was a typical pioneer's cabin, the door having a wooden latch with a string on the outside, which could be locked by pulling the string on the inside. Mr. Deem sawed lum- ber at night during the winter season, by the use of the water-mill, four miles away, and in this way secured lumber enough to build a new house. His father had built what is believed to have been the first brick house in Decatur county. After two years' residence in Shelby county, Mr. Deem returned with his family to Decatur county, and here he engaged in the mercantile and grain business at Adams, \\'here he remained for six years. He operated a saw-mill for a number of years and then moved to his farm in Adams township. At one time he was the owner of four hundred acres of land, but has sold the greater portion of this land and now has two hundred and fifty acres. In 1894 Mr. Deem retired from active farm life and moved to Greensburg, where he engaged in the hardware and implement business, in which he continued for a period of eighteen years. On account of the DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 7II poor health of Mrs. Deem, he retired from business at this time and cared for his wife until her death. John Wesley Deem was married on September 20, 1855, to Margaret Jane Logan, who was born on November 9, 1832, in Decatur county, the daughter of Samuel Logan and wife. Mrs. Deem died on September 28, 1903. John W. Deem and wife were the parents of six children, Sarah Susanna, who was born on August 11, 1856, was married to Arthur Doggett, March 4, 1875, and died ten years later on October 17, 1885, leaving two children, Mrs. Sarah Alberta Brockelmeier and Otis; Samuel Logan, Febru- ary 15, 1858, married Flora King; Kate, March 25, i860, died on December 20, 1865; Wilham Henry Ellsworth, August 13, 1862, died August 22, 1863; Mary, October 13, 1864, married J. C. Bird, December 21, 1881, and on May 29, 1895, her death occurred, leaving two children, Mrs. Ethel Koester, who is a resident of Cincinnati, and has two children, Robert and one unnamed, and Harry Bird, a resident of Greensburg; John Franklin, who was born on March 29, 1871, lives on the home place. He married Julia E. Sefton, December 24, 1890. John Wesley Deem, during his lifetime, has been an ardent believer in Republican principles and has always voted the Republican ticket. He is a member of the Methodist Episcopal church, but on account of defect in hearing, cannot enjoy attending. He is a member of the Masonic lodge, in which he is deeply interested. IRA CLARK. Of pioneer descent, the gentleman whose name is here noted, maintains in his own life and manner of living all the sterling traditions of a stalwart and vigorous race of God-fearing, home-loving, temperate and industrious forbears, men and women who wrought well during the early days of this section of the state and who, upon passing, bequeathed to their posterity the priceless legacy of a good name. Born and reared in this county, Mr. Clark has created at Greensburg, the county seat, a business which aids very materially in carrying the name of that pleasant city to distant parts of this country. The beautiful flowers which are cultivated in the famous green- houses of Ira Clark & Company at Greensburg are shipped to cities at far distant points, being one of the most delightful contributions this county makes to the commerce of the land. Roses and carnations are the special 712 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. products of this well-known greenhouse and a wide territory is supplied from the Clark houses, shipments of the standard and best varieties being made to points as far west as Denver, as far north as Toronto and as far south as Atlanta and New Mexico. In addition to these select varieties, Mr. Clark also cultivates a general line of florist's goods and has a place which is one of the show places of the town, carrying on a business in which all the people in and about Greensburg take a very proper pride. Ira Clark & Company's greenhouses cover twelve thousand square feet of surface, com- prising eight large houses, hot water and steam heated, and are otherwise fully equipped according to all modern requirements. Ira Clark was born on a farm near the town of Clarksburg, this county, on June 5, 1870, the son of Hezekiah E. and Catherine J. (^filler) Clark, the former of whom was born in Pennsylvania in 1827 and died at his home in this county in 1896, and the latter of whom was born in Franklin county, this state, on June i, 1840, and is now residing in the city of Greensburg. Hezekiah E. Clark was the son of William Clark, who founded the town of Clarksville, Pennsylvania, in the year 181 7, and who, with his brother, gave a church to the town. Just ninety-eight years later, on February 14, 1915, this historic old church was profusely decorated with flowers shipped from Greensburg by Ira and Nellie M. Clark, grandchildren of William Clark. William Clark and three brothers came to .-Vmerica from Scotland in the eighteenth century, one of the brothers locating in Pennsylvania, another in New Jersey and the other in South Carolina. William Clark later moved to Ohio, in which state his last days were passed. His son, Hezekiah E., came to Decatur county, Indiana, in 1854, settling in the village of Clarksburg, where he married Catherine J. Miller, who was born on June I, 1840, the daughter of Jacob and Rebecca (Lewis) Miller, and who now is residing in Greensburg. Jacob Miller, a native of Virginia, was the second person to settle in Fugit township, this county, and was one of the men who organized the township. He came to this county about the year 1821, fol- lowing a "blazed trail," and quickly established himself here, being one of the most potent forces in the creation of a social order in the then wilderness. His wife, Rebecca Lewis, was a cousin of "Davy" Crockett, she and the immortal hero of the Alamo having been reared children together. The Lewises and the Crocketts left A'irginia together, but parted at Cinch mountain, the Crocketts going on into Tennessee and the Lewises coming to Indiana. Jacob Miller, who was born in the year 1800 and died in 1872, first settled on Salt creek, in Franklin county, this state, where he married Rebecca Lewis, later coming to this county and settling in Fugit township where he DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 713 and his wife spent the remander of their Hves. Hezekiah Clark moved from Fugit township to CHnton township, this county, and died on the farm in that township, one of the most highly respected men in the county. Both the Clarks and the Millers were of a hardy, self-respecting, upright race, stanch Methodists and firm in the expression of the courage of their con- victions. The JNlillers entertained John Wesley when that great, apostle of Methodism made his historic tour into Virginia. These two families were ardent temperance advocates and practiced what they preached, even in a day when the drinking of strong drinks was a common practice. In the old "log rolling'" days, when it came time for Jacob Miller to invite his pioneer neighbors to such a fete, he declined to furnish whisky to the par- ticipants in the arduous labors of the day, notwithstanding the time-honored custom of the period ; being so strictly temperate in his own habits that he would not consent to putting the intoxicating glass to his neighbors' lips. To Hezekiah E. and Catherine J. (Miller) Clark were born seven children, five sons and two daughters, namely : Jesse M., who died on April 9, 1898; Tillman, who lives in Howard county, Indiana; Mrs. Clara Draper, who lives on a farm east of Greensburg, in this county; Emmet, a well- known farmer of Adams township, this county; Nellie M., who is associated with her brother, Ira, in the florist's business in Greensburg; Ira, the imme- diate subject of this sketch, and A. Burl, who lives in the state of Oklahoma. Ira Clark received his early education in the schools of Sandusky, this county, and was graduated from the school at that place. To this course of schooling he added a course in the Central Normal School, at Danville, Indiana, from which he also was graduated, after which, for ten years, he taught in the schools of Sandusky and St. Paul, this county, being the assist- ant principal in the latter school. He then, in the year 1901, engaged in the florist's business in Greensburg, he and his partner conducting the business for a year under the firm style of Hedges & Clark, the concern in 1902 becoming known as Clark & Company. The beginning of this business was on a comparatively small scale, but Mr. Clark later bought out the green- houses of Henry Bentlage, combining the two greenhouses under the present efficient management, and has been quite successful. In 1897 Ii'S' Clark was united in marriage to Carrie Bell-\'andament, a well-known and popular teacher in the Sandusky schools, the daughter of J. C. Bell, a prominent resident of that village. To this union two children have been born. Wayne, who now is sixteen years of age, and Lewis, now twelve years of age. I\Ir. and Mrs. Clark are members of the First Methodist Episcopal 714 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. church and are acti\-e workers in the congregation to which they are attached, Mr. Clark being one of the church stewards. Following the example of his pioneer forbears, Mr. Clark is a strong temperance advocate and is one of the leaders in all the good works of the city in which he lives. In his poli- tical views he is quite independent, believing that it is the duty of a good citizen to support the ablest and most conscientious men for positions of public trust and responsiljility, regardless of the party with which candi- dates for office are affiliated. He is a member of the Knights of Pythias and of the Odd Fellows and takes a warm interest in the affairs of these two popular fraternal orders. Mr. Clark is an energetic business man and public-spirited citizen who has the entire confidence of the community in which he lives and he and Mrs. Clark are held in the highest regard by all who have the pleasure of their acquaintance. CORNELIUS MESSLER. Cornelius Messier, a well-known retired citizen of Greensburg, Indiana, belongs to a family which served its country most valiantly during the trying days of the Civil War. Four Messier brothers, of whom Cornelius was the second, hazarded their lives on the battlefields of the Civil War for the preservation of the American Union. It is doubtful whether there are any families in Decatur county, which can show a more patriotic record than this. A member of Company H, Third Indiana Cavalry, and in the service of his country nearly four years, a participant in at least twenty-five severe battles, including the battles of Corinth and Pittsburg Landing, Cornelius Messier was taken prisoner at Soloman's Grove, North Carolina, on ^larch 10, and held until the latter part of 1865, a period of sixty days in all. Two brothers, James and John, were members of the One Hundredth Regiment, Indiana \'olunteer Infantry, and one brother, Henry, was a soldier in the Eleventh Regiment, Indiana A'olunteer Infantry. This country is enthus- iastically and reverently proud of the splendid service which was per- formed by the heroes of 1861-65. ^^ 's not only proud of the service they performed during this troubled period, but it is likewise proud to number among its citizens in these days of peace the battle-scarred veterans of that war, among whom is Cornelius Messier.. A resident of Greensburg, Indiana, Cornelius ^Messier li\es in a com- fortable home, and was born on September 23, 1832. in Hamilton county, DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 7I 5 Ohio, the son of John S. and Sabina Messier, the former of whom was a native of New Jersey, born on August 2, 1797, and who died on September 30, 1840, the latter of whom was born on April 13, 1809, and died on June II, 1849. John S. Messier, who came west from Philadelphia, died in Union county, Indiana, and his wife passed away in Salt Creek town- ship, Decatur county. They had six children, William F., James, Cornelius, John R., Henry, and Mary A. When twelve years old, Cornelius Messier was employed to drive a team along the old White Water canal, from Cmcinnati to Cleavestown, and thence by the way of the Wabash & Erie canal to Toledo, a distance of three hundred and eighty miles. In 1842 the family came to Decatur county, where Cornelius lived for one year, and then returned to the state of Ohio, and was engaged as a stage-driver in that state for a period of six- teen years. In the meantime he worked at various occupations, coming to Decatur county, Indiana, to live permanently in 1897. Mr. Messier has been twice married, the first time to Sarah A. Hannan, who was born on November 5, 1828, and who died on February 2, 1883. She was buried in Taswell county, Virginia. She was the mother of five children, three of whom, Mary A., John and Anna, the youngest, are now deceased. The two eldest, William, who was born, October 3, 1855, and James H., on June 8, 1859, live near Frankfort, and Hartford City, respec- tively. Many years after the death of Mrs. Sarah A. (Hannan) Messier, Mr. Messier was married again, April 21, 1898, the second time to Sarah Eliza- beth Bell, who was born on the Bell homestead on April 11, 1840, and who is the daughter of Henson S. and Ann (Marlin) Bell, natives of Woodford county, Kentucky, and Monmouth county. New Jersey, respectively, the former of whom was the son of Daniel and Nancy Bell. Henson S. Bell, who died on November 30, 1890, at the age of eighty-one years, was a mere boy when he came from Kentucky to Indiana. For some time he and his wife li\-ed in Laurel, but they later moved to a farm, just before the death of his wife in 1841. In 1850 he removed to Oregon, driving overland, but returned in 1873, and lived on his farm until his death. In the meantime he had traveled over Oregon, Washington, and California. He had two children, Nancy Jane, deceased, who was born in 1837, and who died in 1856, and Mrs. Cornelius Messier. Daniel Bell, the father of Henson S. Bell, died on April 28, 1875, at the age of ninety-five years. His wife, Nancy Bell, died on February 8, 1883, at the age of ninety- fi\e. The\- had come to Decatur countv in 1822, and homesteaded on government land. On their yi6 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. trip to Decatur county they were accompanied by their son, Henson, the father of ]\Irs. Alessler. Before returning home they planted a patch of corn, and upon coming back to Decatur county found out that the squirrels had eaten up the corn. The ten children born to Daniel and Nancy Bell, John, Louisa, Henson, George, Thomas, Mary, Nancy, Tarlton, James and Julia, are all deceased. Mr. and Mrs. Messier have a farm of eighty-one acres in Fugit town- ship, the old Bell homestead, although they have for several years resided in Greensburg, where, in October, 1902, they bought a home. They are known as among the most delightful people living in the city of Greensburg. Mr. Messier is a man who has enjoyed a variety of experiences, and who is rich in anecdote of former times, a charming conversationalist, a genial, broad-minded citizen, who is revered by his fellow townsmen and honored by all with whom he has ever come in contact. Mrs. Messier is a woman of most gracious personality, refined and cultured, interested in all worthy public movements, and who for many years was a leader among her sex in this county. Eminentl}^ worthy as both J\Ir. and Mrs. Messier are, they well deserve the respect and esteem of the .people of Greensburg and Decatur county. Mrs. Messier is now and has been a member of INIt. Carmel Methodist Episcopal church since 1855. HARRY H. MOUNT. Harry H. INIount, of Greensburg, Indiana, formerly a school teacher and banker, now a farmer, who owns two hundred and forty acres of land near the Shelby county line, is one of the best-known citizens of Decatur county. For several years he has been an extensive breeder of Aberdeen Angus cattle, and for the past two years has raised only registered cattle. His herd consists now of forty-four head, eight of which are registered stock. Mr. Alount was born on December 28, 1875, on a farm in Noble town- ship, Shelliy county, Indiana, two miles west of Cliffy, or INIilford, the son of Thomas J. and Nancy (Thornburg) Blount, natives of Noble township, Shelby county, Indiana, the former of whom was born on August 24, 1846, and who died on October 10, 1910, and the latter of whom was born on July 6, 1844, and who died on September 2, 1894, many years before the death of her husband. Tiie late Thomas J. Mount was the son of Matthias DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 717 and Margaret (Marsh) Mount, natives of Kentucky, the former of whom was born in 1823, and who died in 1893. Coming to Shelby county, Indiana, with his father when a mere lad, he eventually succeeded to the land his father entered from the government, and it is this land which is now held by the Mount family. His wife, who before her marriage was Margaret Marsh, was born in 1825, and died, three years before the death of her hus- band, in 1890. They had ten children, six of whom lived to maturity, Thomas J., was the father of Harry H. ; Mrs. Martha Hanks died on Feb- ruary ZT,, 1913; Amos died in March, 1894; Hannah is deceased; Sarah died in 1881 ; and Mrs. Emma Blackmore lives on the old home place. Thomas J. Mount, a successful farmer and stockman, removed to Greensburg in November, 1884, from which place he looked after his farm- ing interests, living there until 1908, when he returned to the farm, and there died. In 1896 he purchased a farm from Frank Butler on the Shelby and Decatur county line, a part of which was in Clay township, Decatur county, and a part of which was in Shelby county. He owned four hundred and fifty acres in all, and at one time was an extensive breeder of Poland China hogs. He exercised his right of franchise as a Republican. He and his family were members of the Methodist Episcopal church. The late Thomas J. and Nancy (Thornburg) Mount had only two children, Harry H., the subject of this sketch, and Mrs. Elmer E. Wooden, who lives in Greensburg. Mrs. Nancy (Thornburg) Mount was a native of Noble township, Shelby county, Indiana, and the daughter of Thomas and Maria (Berry) Thorn- burg", who were in turn natives of Pennsylvania, and Ohio, respectivel3^ They migrated to Shelby county, Indiana, in the late thirties. Educated in the country schools of Decatur county and in the Greens- burg high school, Harry H. Mount attended the State University at Bloom- ington, Indiana, pursuing his studies in the scientific course. After teaching school for two years in Clay township at the Hiner and Brown schools, he resigned in 1899 to take a position as bookkeeper in the Third National Bank, and from December i, 1899, to May i, 1912, a period of thirteen years, he was bookkeeper and teller at this institution. Since 1912 Mr. Mount has been devoting all of his attention in directing the work on his two-hundred- and-forty-acre farm on the Shelby county line. On June 7, 1905, Harry H. Mount was married to Daisy E. Gartin, of Hartford City, Indiana, who is the daughter of Griffith and Laura E. (Templeton) Gartin, formerly residents of Decatur county. Indiana. The father now lives in Muncie. Mrs. Mount was born on September 2/. 1876, in Decatur county. Her father, who was born in this county on October JlS DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 26, 1854, is llie son of Clril'litli (iartin, Sr., a natiw of \'ir<;inia, aiul an early settler in Decatur county. Her mother, who hefore her marriage was Laura E. Templeton, was born on l'"ehruary 13, iSs^^, and died on June 25, 1882, in I'Vanklin county. She was the dau,^hter of John Templeton, who came to Mecalur counl\- in an early day. Mrs. .Mount is the onl_\' child horn to her father's first marriage. .\. Republican in party ])olitics, Harry 11. .Mount is a member of the Greensburg citv council, and is giving efficient service to his tellow towns- men as a public ofticial and an enterprising and public-spirited citizen. Mr. and .Mrs. Mount are meiubers of the .Methodist h'.piscopal church. He is a member of the Knights of I'ythias Lodge No. 148, at Greensburg, and for sex'cn years has been keeiier of records and seal. Mr. and Mrs. Mount live in a moilern home, and both are well educated and highly rei'med. Mrs. Mount is treasurer of the Deiiartment Glub at Greensburg, and both take an active part in tiie social life of the city. S.VMUKL H, STEWART. The Stewart family in Decatur county was fotnidctl by Atlani L. Stew- art, a native of South Carolina, born in iSi 1, and who died in 1896, From SotUh Carolina, he immigrated with his father, James Stewart, to Ohio, and it was here that lie was reared. JM-om Ohio he came to Rush county about 1832, and one year later mo\ctl to luigit township, Decatur county, Intliana, where he settled. Here he married Isal)ella Hood, the daughter of Samuel .and Isabella (Lee) 1 b)od, wiiose grantlfatber, John Carson, of X'irginia, was a soldier in the .\merican Revolution, Lsabella Hood was born in Ken- tucky in i8ir> and died in 18S8. She was l)rought to Decatur county by her father, Samuel Hood, who came in 1827. In 1852 Adam L. and Isabella (Hood) Stewart mo\cd to a farm in Clinton township, consisting of eighty acres and here they li\ed until their deaths. Samuel 11. Stewart, who is one of eight children born to Adam L. and Isabella Stewart, and who is a prominent stock dealer and farmer of Greens- burg, now li\ing retireil, is the subject of tiiis sketch. Samuel H. Stewart w;is born on Jaiuiary 26, 1837, in Fugit townsliip. He was the eldest child born to bis parents, the otliers being James, wiio died at the age of thirteen; Mrs. So|)lna Weed, deceased; I'.liza, who died in i8er acre. After having reared a family of two children to maturity, Ezra Lathrop died in 1894. Six children, however, were liorn to himself and wife, four of thera dying in infancy. Levi, one of the sons who grew to maturity, died m 1884, and the other son is James B., the subject of this sketch, who was born on November 24, 1825, in a one-story brick house, which stood in the 726 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. second square from the court house on East Washington street, and which Ezra Lathrop had built probably in 1823. The venerable James B. Lathrop received an extraordinary education for his day and generation, having been instructed in the pioneer schools of Greensburg, and at Indiana University. Immediately after leaving col- lege he entered the ministry of the Methodist Episcopal church. Beginning in 1847, ^t the age of twenty-two, he served almost continuously as pastor of some church for thirty-one years. He was first called upon to fill a vacancy on the iMartinsville circuit. Later he was transferred to Greenville, having in the meantime eighteen appointments in school houses, homes and churches. At Vincennes, Indiana, he had a very hard field, but was able to establish two new churches. From Vincennes he was transferred to Point Commerce on the Wabash river. From Point Commerce he went to Franklin, Indiana, a very poor church, which had only fifty members as late as 185 1. Among other charges he was pastor of the church at Conners- ville, Vevay, Madison, Brookville, Columbus, Rushville, Aurora and Adams. When he went to Adams, there were only sixteen members, and within two years during his pastorate the church had increased to one hundred mem- bers and a new building had been dedicated. The Greensburg church had the best village Sunday school in Decatur county. After a brief absence from the ministry, during which he was engaged in business with his brother at Greensburg. he returned to Connersville in the fall of 1864, and became presiding elder, a position which he held for two years, having jurisdiction over the Indianapolis district, and completing the balance of the six-year term on Moores Hill district, as the result of hav- ing traded districts with Elder Holliday, of Moores Hill. He was presiding elder of the Lawrenceburg and Moores Hill districts for six years each. At one time Reverend Lathrop was in charge of the Grace Methodist Episcopal church in Indianapolis, but on account of the death of his brother and the aged parents, he returned home and served as pastor within the Milroy circuit for four years. On the death of his brother in 1884, Mr. Lathrop became guardian for his children, and had charge of his deceased brother's estate. Subse- quently, he became guardian for two girls left fatherless, and served in this capacity for five years. The father having been a mill owner, Mr. Lathrop operated the mill for the children for one year, selling the mill to a com- pany. He operated the mill for the company for five years. He has been connected with the Citizens National Bank of Greensburg for many years, and on his father's death became manager of his estate, assisted by Lewis DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 727 E. Lathrop, which position he held until 1884, when he turned the estate, amounting to a hundred thousand dollars, over to his children. In this connection it may be said that Mr. Lathrop's career as a minis- ter ended with a tinal period of four years during which he was a junior preacher on the Milroy circuit. On November 28, 1848, James B. Lathrop was married to Mary C. Butler, who was born in Bloomington, Indiana, and who was the daughter of F. T. Butler. Mrs. Lathrop was born in 1830 and died in 1897. She was the mother of six children, two of whom died early in life. Levi died at the age of twelve years, and William died at the age of two years. The other children are Mrs. Ella Gavin, wife of Judge Gavin, of Indianapolis; Lizzie, who lives with her father; Harry, the secretary of the Business Men's Association of Greensburg, and Mrs. Margaret Shannon, wife of John Shannon, who lives one and one-half miles northwest of Greensburg. James B. Lathrop has been a life-long Republican. Fraternally, he is a member of the Free and Accepted Masons, and is a Knight Templar, being a member of the Baldwin Commandery at Shelby ville, Indiana. Possessed with a genius for public service, the influence of James B. Lathrop will live when he is gone. As his career is nearing a close he may enjoy the satisfaction of looking back on a life which has been spent in his Master's vineyard. Having carried the Christian Gospel to the people of this state at a time when it involved a greater sacrifice than at present, and having been a true ser\'ant, it is not too much to believe that his work will be approved by the One he has served in these well-known words, "Well done, thou good and faithful servant." Mr. Lathrop became a stockholder of the Citizens Bank at Greens- burg, Indiana, in 1873. He has served as president of the bank for sev- eral years. ANTHONY HABIG. Among the thriving businesses in Decatur county, Indiana, is that of the Habig Real Estate Agency, established in 1897 by Anthony Habig. This firm not only deals in farms and city properties in Indiana and Ohio, but also has a large loan business and deals in lands in Texas, Louisiana, Florida, Canada and Oklahoma. The company has handled a considerable acreage of land during its existence, Mr. Habig buying and selling thousands of acres principally upon the commission basis. Although Anthony Habig is not a native of this county, he has resided 'I 728 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. here now for twenty-five years and is naturally well known. He was born in Cincinnati on December 5, 1870, the son of Joseph and Theresa liabig, natives of Cincinnati, who moved to Indiana in 1880 and located on a farm one mile east of Shelbyville. They later resided in Greensburg and he was engaged in the milling business until 1897, when they moved to Indianapolis^ where they died in 1905. Mr. Habig has resided in Greensburg since 1890. From 1890 to 1897, he was employed in the office of the mill operated by his father. In the latter year he engaged in the real estate business and has been continuously engaged since that time. In 1891 Mr. Habig was married to Ethel Fromer, of Greensburg and to them have been born two children, Marguerite and Velma. ' A Democrat in politics, Mr. Habig has never taken a special part in the councils of his part}'. He has never held office nor has he ever aspired to office, devoting his time almost exclusively to his own private business. Fraternally, Mr. Habig is a member of the Knights of Columbus and the Knights of St. John and is prominent in both organizations. The Habig family are all members of the Catholic church and are liberal contributors to its support. .\nthony Habig is a man, who, in his dealings with the public, has established an enviable reputation for honorable and square dealings. In his business especially this is an important asset and it is responsible largely for the splendid clientage which he today enjoys. He also handles old line fire insurance, Hanover h'ire Insurance Company, New York City; Aachen and Munich, New York City; also has a rent-collecting depart- ment. BERNARD H. BLANKMAN. In the history of our country, the schoolroom has led directly to many positions of trust and responsibility, and many of our celebrated statesmen today are men who began their active careers in life as teachers in the pub- lic schools. Bernard H. Blankman, the present surveyor of Decatur county, Indiana, who began teaching at the age of eighteen, was engaged continu- ously in this profession for fourteen years. He is a man who is well known to the people of Decatur county, and who, having given a satisfactory meas- ure of service during his first term as county surveyor, was triumphantly re-elected in the fall of 1914 to serve a second term. Ml;. AM* MUS. HKUXAltn II. ItL.WKMAX. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 729 « Bernard H. Blankman, the county surveyor of Decatur county, was born on October 28, 1877, at Millliousen, Indiana, where lie now resides. He is the son of Henry and Mary (GoldschmicU) Blankman, the former of whom was born on December 6, 1849, '" Cincinnati, and the latter of whom was born in 1857 in the same city. Nine children were born to Henry and Mary Blankman; Bernard, the subject of this sketch; Edward, Frank. August, William and Mrs. Clara Vaske, all of whom reside at Bigelow, Minnesota ; Mrs. Josephine Ruhl, who lives in Millliousen ; John and Theo- dore, who still live at home. Henry Blankman was the son of Bernard H. and Angela (Lueken) Blankman, both of whom were born in Germany, although not in the same state. They came to America when still young people, met and were mar- ried in Cincinnati, Ohio. They moved to Millhousen, Decatur county, when their son, Henry, was six year old. Mr. Blankman's maternal grandparents were John Bernard and Elizabeth (Brinkers) Goldschmidt, who were also born in Germany. They moved to Millhousen, Decatur county, when Mr. Blankman's mother was eleven years old. Henry Blankman and Mary Goldschmidt were married in Millhousen. Bernard H. Blankman attended the parochial school at Alillhousen until fourteen years of age, and was then a student in the district school, No. 6, in Marion township, being graduated from the district school at the age of seventeen. Subsequently, he attended the Central Nonnal College at Danville, Indiana, during the summer of 1895, preparatory to teaching. He has learned surveying by home study and by practical work. Mr. Blank- man taught school for fourteen years, having begun at the age of eighteen. He taught until 1913, when he assumed the duties of surveyor, having been elected to the office in November, 1912. This office was wholly unsought, as Mr. Blankman is in no sense of the word a politician. He gave such excellent service that he was re-elected in 191 4. During the three years that he has held the office he has had no trouble and during this period has had charge of all land surveys, the building of macadamized roads and all bridges in Decatur county. Mr. Blankman has one hundred acres of land — well improved farm — which he rents out. He, however, still lives on his farm. On June 7, 1905, Mr. Blankman was married in Millhousen to Clara M. Hardebeck, who was born at Millhousen on December 4, 1885, and who is the daughter of Henry and Rebecca ( Funke) Hardelieck, the former of whom was born near Marion, Indiana, on January 27, 1840, and who died on October 10, 191 3. The latter was born in Germany on Februar}' 2, 730 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 1845. They were the parents of the following children : Mrs. Josephine Steltenpohl; Mrs. Mary Butz; Mrs. Cecelia Ronnebaum; Frances, at home; Theodore, a farmer of Marion township; Louis and Henry, also at home. Mr. and Mrs. Blankman have had five children : Cyril, w-ho was born on December 14, 1907; Paul, August 20, 1909; Alvin, May 17, 1911 ; Laura, October 21, 19 13, and Orval Theo, June 20, 19 15. Fraternally, Mr. Blankman is a member of the Knights of St. John. He and his wife and family are members of the Catholic church and he is identified with the Democratic party. He owes his nomination and election as county sui'veyor to this party. HARRY EMMERT. An enterprise of which the people of Greensburg are very proud, and one which finally passed under the control of local capitalists, is the Greens- burg Water Company, which supplies water to the citizens of Greensburg frorii thirty driven wells by the latest compressed air system. The Greens- burg Water Company, of which Harry Emmert is vice-president and gen- eral manager, has one of the finest plants in Indiana, and one which is en- tirely adequate for a much larger city. The new system, which was installed in 1915 after two years' work at a cost of forty thousand dollars, makes it possible to pump water to a radius of one and one-half miles. Although this company was organized in 1888 by Samuel R. Bullock, a few years later it was owned by the Prudential Water Company, of Rochester, New York, and in 1901 passed to the control of residents of this city. For almost twenty years Harry Emmert has been the general manager of this plant, and its splendid success is so closely intertwined with his career as a business man, that it seems fitting here to emphasize its importance to the comfort and convenience of the city of Greensburg. The present president of the company is David A. Myers. Mr. Emmert is vice-president and gen- eral manager. James B. Kitchen is secretary and treasurer. These officers with W. W. Woodfill and \^'. H. Robbins comprise the board of directors. The company, which is capitalized at one hundred thousand dollars, employs ten people. Harry Emmert, who has been general manager of the Greensburg W^ater Company since 1896, was born on October 6, 1868. in Greensburg, but is the son of native-born German parents, John and Catherine (Seitz) DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 73 1 Emmert. The former, who was born in Mannheim, Germany, came to this country a poor boy, and attended night school after coming here to obtain an education. Coming to Greensburg, Indiana, in 1866, he built the Gar- land mills, and operated these mills until his death. Before coming to Greensburg he had lived in Lawrenceburg, to which place he came in 1853. He not only was engaged in the milling business, but he was a miller by trade, as was his father before him, and no doubt his technical knowledge of the business was, in a large measure, responsible for his great success. During his life John Emmert was an influential man in Decatur county. A Democrat in politics, he served as councilman of Greensburg for a number of years, and was public-spirited, progressive, industrious and became very wealthy. A member of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows for many years, he was prominent in that organization. There were three eventful years in the career of John Emmert. In 1845, when he came to America with his parents and located at Trenton, New Jersey; in 1853, when he located at Lawrenceburg, where he was married to Catherine Seitz, and in 1866, when he came to Greensburg, Indiana, where the most of his for- tune was acquired. His wife, who before her marriage was Catherine Seitz, was born in Alsace-Lorraine, and was brought to America with her parents when four years old, in 1838. The}- first located in Hamilton, Ohio, but her father, Christopher Seitz, later removed to Dearborn county, where he became a farmer. John Emmert died in 1882. while his wife survived him many years, dying in 1909. Harry Emmert grew up in the milling business of his father, having worked in his father's mill from the time he was a small lad. In the mean- time he received a liberal education in -the public and high schools of Greens- burg, and when finishing high school was reasonably well equipped for a business career. At the age of twenty-eight he became manager of the Greensburg Water Company, and with the growth of this company he also has grown as a business man, having become, in the meantime, president of the Citizens Gas Supply Company, a fifteen thousand dollar corporation, president of the Sand Creek Gas Company, a five thousand dollar corpora- tion, which supplies natural gas to the Citizens Gas Supply Company, besides being extensively interested in other important local enterprises. IMr. Emmert has never married. He is a Democrat in politics and a member of the Presbyterian church. He is a member of the Masonic lodge, the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, and the Benevolent and Protective •Order of Elks. Water, as we all know, is a public utility and a public convenience and 732 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. necessity, and the man who is responsible for furnishing pure, clean water to the people of a city, performs a greater service than a man can perform in almost any other way. Mr. Emmert is a skilled manager, and being sup- plied with the best equipment, he naturally is in a position to maintain cordial relations with the public. In the city of Greensburg he is very popular.. NELSON MOWREY. Decatur county has produced men who have risen to distinction in many different fields of endeavor, but it is safe to say that no man has made a more pronounced success of agriculture than Nelson Alowrey. Born in this county more than eighty years ago, he has made it his life-long resi- dence and has never cared to exjhange it for any other home. Decatur county has been good enough for him. There is probably no other occuijation which }'ields the certain returns that may come to the farmer, and the striking success which has attended the efforts of Mr. Mowrey are ample evidence that he has applied his ener- gies in such a way as to produce maximum results. Starting out in life with only a small competenc}' he has labored to the end that he has accu- mulated more material wealth from the soil than an}' other farmer who has ever tilled the soil in the county. But it is not mere wealth which makes a man. If it were, there would be no outcry against the men of wealth in this country today. It is the use of the wealth once gained which marks the true .American citizen, and it is in this particular that Mr. ]Mowr'ey stands high in the estimation of his fellow citizens. More than one church in the county can testify to his generosity; more than one congregation in the county today is doing the Master's work better and more efficiently because of the broad philanthro- pic spirit of Mr. Mowrey. The crowning act of Mr. Mowrey, however, which shows his worth as a pulilic-spirited citizen was his gift to the city of Greensburg which made the magnihcent new Young Men's Christian Association building a possibility. This was erected in 19 15, solely through the munificence of Mr. Mowrey and will stand as a monument through manv generations }-et to come. Thus it may be seen wh\' Mr. Mowrey merits the title of the "Grand old man of Greensburg." Nelson Mowrey, the son of Joel and Priscilla (King) Mowrey, was born on July 30, 1832, in Clay township, Decatur county, Indiana. His DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 733 father, a native of Kentucky, was a thrifty citizen for his day and genera- tion and when he came from Kentuck}- to Decatur county in the early twen- ties, he at once set about to carve a place out of the primeval wilderness. Here he and his good wife lived until their death, he passing away in 1834, when Nelson was only two years of age. The mother was left with a fam- ily of four children. Nelson being the }'oungest. The other three children, John L., Malinda Jane and Thurza Ann, are deceased. Nelson was born -in a log cabin which is still standing. His mother lived to a ripe old age, dying at the age of seventy-eight jn 1880. Educational opportunities were e.xceedingly meager in the boyhood days of Mr. Mowrey. The old-fashioned log school house was still in vogue and the only school was what was known as the subscription school and was in session seldom more than three months in the year. It is a well-known fact that the long nine months" vacation often caused the youngsters of that day to forget practically all that they had learned in the short three months that they were permitted to attend during the winter season. Nevertheless, Mr. Mowrey got a good knowledge of the elements of the "Three R's" in such a school and this was supplemented by wide reading in later life so that he became a well-informed man. He continued to reside on the home farm with his mother and the other members of the family until he was twenty-four years of age, at which time he was given his share in the pater- nal estate, which amounted to fourteen hundred dollars, and with this small amount he started out to make his way alone in the world. It is not the purpose of this brief summary of Mr. Mowrey's life to follow his career in detail through the long years which have followed. Only the larger landmarks in his career will be noticed. On March i, 1857, Mr. Mowrey moved to a farm one and one-half miles south of the old home place and six miles west of Greensburg. This farm of eighty acres was soon increased by the purchase of one hundred and forty-five acres, and on this' farm of two hundred and twenty-five acres, he lived until 1887. In the meantime he had been buying land in other parts of the county and in 1887 he moved on to one of his eighty-acre farms in Clay township. Year after year saw his acreage increase until he had accumulated twenty-eight hundred acres of land in the county. The acquisition of such an extensive estate could only come about by the closest application and the widest foresight. Much of the wealth of Mr. Mowrey has come about by the natural increase in the value of his land, much of which has increased several fold in value since he acquired it. Mr. Mowrey continued in the active management of his extensive farming 734 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. interests until his marriage in the fall of 1907, since which time he has made his home in Greensburg. . 'Sir. ;\Io\vrey was married on October 2, 1907, to Carrie F. Seitz, who was born in Patriot, Indiana, a daughter of ^Michael and Sophia Seitz. Her parents were natives of Germany and first located in Switzerland county, Indiana, upon coming to this country. A few years later they set- tled in Dearborn county where they made their home the remainder of their lives. The career of ilr. ]Mowre}' has been altogether too active as a farmer and financier to permit of any participation in politics. He has always been identified with the Republican party and given it his hearty support at all times. While he leans to the Christian church, yet he has been a generous contributor to all denominations. Fraternally, he has been a member of the Free and Accepted Masons at Milford for many years. WALTER W. BOXNER. The life of every man is influenced by two factors, heredity and envi- ronment, and no one can say which of these two factors has the most to do with determining the career of a man. Fortunate, indeed, is' the man who has good blood in his veins, for undoubtedly, as the old adage says, "Blood will tell." However, there are too many exceptions to the statement that heredity counts for everything; too many men of the Lincoln type have risen to fame to believe that heredity accounts for all our eminent men. Environment must be given credit for many things and he who says that one or the other factor makes a man assumes a knowledge of men which the facts will not warrant. The career of Walter W. Bonner happily illus- trates a combination of heredity and enviroiynent and in his case both factors have united in such a manner as to make him a man of the highest type of American citizenship. Starting in life as a lawyer. Mr. Bonner soon left the profession to enter banking and has made this his life-long work. For more than thirty years he has been identified with the Third National Bank of Greensburg. \\'alter W. Bonner was born near Springhill, Decatur county, Indiana, on July 30, i860, a son of William H. and Narcissa E. (Elliott) Bonner. His father was born in Wilcox county, Alabama, a son of James and Mary P. (Foster) Bonner, who came with his parents to Decatur county in 1836. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 735 The father of James Bonner was a Scotch Presbyterian and left his home in the north of Ireland toward the end of the eighteenth century. He came to America and settled on a plantation near Anderson, South Carolina, rt&t far from the historic old plantation which was destined in after years to become the home of John C. Calhoun, and there James Bonner was born. The latter was reared near Abbeville, South Carolina, and there married Mary P. Foster, whose father, James Foster, was born in the north of Ire- land, and who became a farmer after his migration to South Carolina and in 1837 came to this county, settling on a farm in the Springhill neighbor- hood, where he spent the rest of his life. Two years after his marriage James Bonner moved to Wilcox county, Alabama, where he dwelt for six- teen years, owning and operating a large plantation, the work of which was performed by slaves. Coming to hate the institution of slavery, he sold his slaves in a body to his brother and, in the spring of 1836, came to this county, becoming a large farmer in P\igit township, where he died at the age of fifty-five. Mary, the wife, died in 1837, where he was married a second time. James Bonner was the father of six children, two daughters who died in early womanhood, James F., Dr. John I., William H., father of the immediate subject of this sketch, and Robert, who died in childhood. William H. Bonner was reared on the home farm near Springhill and was a farmer all his life. He became a man of large influence in the county and in 1868 was elected representative from this county to the state Legis- lature. He served one term in a manner very acceptable to his constituents, but declined a re-nomination. Hon. William H. Bonner for many years was one of the leaders of the Republican party in this part of the state and was influential in all good ways. He was a member of the United Presby- terian church and served for many years as a ruling elder of the local con- gregation. He was twice married, his first wife having been Elmira L. Hamilton, a sister of Thomas M. Hamilton. Upon her death, he 'married, secondly, Narcissa E. Elliott, to which union there were born two sons and one daughter, Henry E., a farmer of this county; Walter W., with whom this biography directly treats, and Mary F. The Hon. William H. Bonner died on August 12, 1874. Walter W. Bonner was educated in the district schools of Fugit town- ship and in Indiana University at Bloomington. In the year 1881 he began studying law in the office of Miller & Gavin, in Greensburg, and in 1882 was admitted to practice at the bar of the Decatur circuit court. He did not practice law very long, however, for when the Third National Bank was opened at Greensburg he entered that institution as a bookkeeper and 736 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. in 1S84 was promoted to the position of assistant cashier, being advanced to the responsiljle position of cashier on February 3, 1887, which position he since has held, his services having proved most satisfactory to the direc- tors of this excellent financial institution. On September 15, 1884, Walter W. Bonner was united in marriage to Libbie Donnell, of Springhill, to which uni(jn there was born one child, a daughter, Ruth, who married Homer G. Meek and has one child, Mary Lois. Mr. Bonner is one of the best-known and most successful financiers in this part of the state. To his excellent direction of afifairs undoubtedly is due much of the strength of the sound financial institution with which he is connected and he has the utmost confidence of all business men through- out this part of the state. THOMAS KNOX SMILEY. Nearing the three-score-and-ten mark along the highway of life, calm and serene, at peace with the world and a lover of all mankind, there is one man in Decatur county to whom the incidental worries and vexations that at times beset most mortals mean very little, for his philosophy of life con- tains no room for the word "worry." Living nearly half a century on the farm on which he still makes his home, he is known to everyone in the part of the county in which he resides, and, as he is a friend of all, all are friends to him, few persons thereabout having a wider personal popularity than he. JoviaU genial, sunny-tempered and full of the joy of living; pros- perous and well-circumstanced, jjossessed of a fine farm of two hundred and thirty-eight acres of choice land in Clay township, on which he lives a life of quiet ease, enjoying the evening of his life as he well deserves to enjoy it; T. K. Smiley, better known to his neighbors and friends as Knox Smiley, is regarded by many as a most fortunate man. A good citizen, a kind and generous neighbor, public-spirited and enterprising, Mr. Smiley has done his part in the advancement of the best interests of the commun- ity of which he so long has been a part, and it is a pleasure on the part of the biographer to here present a few of the salient points in his life. Thomas Knox Smiley was born in the state of Ohio on May 30, 1846, the son of William and Mary Ann (Kenny) Smiley, both of whom were of Irish descent. William Smiley's father emigrated from Ireland to this country and settled in Pennsylvania, where he reared a family and spent the remainder of his days. Mary Ann Kenny was born in New Jersey. THOMAS K. S.MILKY. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 'JT^-J Her mother was a Boston woman, and from a nearby hill was an interested spectator of the battle of Bunker Hill, the presumption being that her hus- band, in common with most of the patriots of that city, was a participant in that historic struggle. Later the Kennys moved from New Jersey, to which latter state they had emigrated from Massachusetts, to Ohio, where the parents of Mrs. Smiley spent the rest of their lives. William Smiley was born in Pennsylvania on March 14, 18 14, the son of Irish parents, and upon reaching manhood's estate moved to Ohio, where he married Mary Ann Kenny about the year 1838, and on January 9, 1849, came to Decatur county, settling in Clay township on what is now known as the Smiley homestead. He bought land at that time for ten dollars an acre that now is worth more than ten times that price. William Smiley was a man of strong character, a stanch and upright citizen and an excellent farmer. He was energetic and enterprising and speedily began to prosper, eventually becoming the owner of nine hundred or one thousand acres of land in Clay township and gaining the reputation of being one of the shrewd- est business men in that part of the county. He and his wife were members of the Methodist church and their children were reared in that faith. Mr. Smiley was an ardent Democrat and took an active interest in political affairs. In one election years ago he was the candidate of his party for the office of county commissioner from his district, and despite the fact that the county at that time returned an overwhelming Republican majority, he was defeated by but two votes, a circumstance which attested unmistakably his popularity throughout the county. As their children grew to manhood and womanhood, Mr. and Mrs. Smiley divided their large land holdings among them and for nearly twenty years lived a life of pleasant retirement in the city of Greensburg. Mr. Smiley died in Greensburg in June, 1893, at the age of seventy-nine years. His widow survived him just three years and she also died at the age of seventy-nine. They were a most estimable old couple and the memory of their wholesome lives and good deeds lives long after them. To William and Mary Ann (Kenny) Smiley were born the following children: Permelia, deceased, who was the M-ife of James L. Henry; Caro- line, who married Edward Sefton: George W., deceased, father of William G. Smiley, who died in 1907, on the old Smiley homestead and was a very successful farmer, being the owner of seven hundred acres of fine land ; Harvey K. married a daughter of John E. Robbins and died in 1915; Thomas Knox, the immediate subject of this sketch; William F.. who lives (47) 738 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. in Greensburg, this county; Maiy, who died in August, 1914; Sovereign Patrick, who hves in Texas, and Margaret, tlie widow of Wilham Johnson. Thomas Knox Smiley has always lived the life of a bachelor, and makes his home with Frank Jalop and wife on the old Smiley homestead, three and one-half miles southwest of the village of Burney, on the Greens- burg and Columbus road. He is a member of the Methodist church at Hartsville and was one of the charter members of the Knights of Pythias lodge at the same place. He is a Democrat and takes an earnest interest in political affairs, but has never sought office. He became the owner of a goodly farm in the distribution of the home acres, but to his share he has added one hundred and twenty acres, acquired by his own industry, and is very well circumstanced. Though still giving careful attention to the gen- eral details of his extensive farming operations, Mr. Smiley for the past ten years has lived practically retired from the active duties of the farm and is taking life easy. The good cheer which he brings into his intercourse with his neighbors, makes him a prime favorite in the neighborhood and no one thereabout is more popular than he. JAMES FRANCIS HAMILTON. A noted Hoosier historian has said, "There is liut one end in life that is worth while, and that is to conquer adversity, pain, envy, regrets, ambi- tions, and the varied obstacles that are put in our path to develop our forti- tude, our courage and our brains." If this be true, the life of the man whose name appears above has been emmently worth while, for he has grad- uated from the "University of Hard Knocks." He knows the joys of suc- cess, the bitterness of misfortune, and has the mental poise to meet both like a man. When but a lad he was called upon to face disappointment, to give up his own education that he might help a bereaved father to care for six younger brothers and sisters, but this he did with(>ut a murmur, and thus perhaps were forged the elements of character which later con- tributed to his success as a man, and in relation to society. James Francis Hamilton, the well-known merchant and undertaker of Westport, was born on August 17, 1869, in the town in which his past and present home is located. Mr. Hamilton's grandfather on the paternal side came from Kentucky to clear and enter the land which became the homestead of this noted family. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 739 This man, James F. Hamilton, was of the stalwart nature of which pioneers are made, and was an ancestor of whom any descendant might be proud. He was born in 1803, and passed away at the age of seventy years. It was in the early thirties when he and his bride, formerly Judah Owens, came to Decatur county, and began planning for the home that was destined to remain in the family for the next thirty-hve years. This land was situated one and one-half miles northwest of Westport. The brave wife of this sturdy pioneer, who was a native of Virginia, was born on December 14, 1799, and died on June 20, 1898. One of their children was George W., who later became the father of the subject of this brief biography. George was born on May 10, 1837, and died on July 29, 1899. His wife, Mary Jane Conwell, who was born on February 3, 1847, belonged to one of the most prominent families in the state. Her Western progenitors formed part of that israve band of pioneers whose courage and heroism in opening up a new and rugged country has made it possible for us to live in peace and plenty. George, of course, was born on the farm of his parents, and after the meager school course then provided, he managed a store in Gay- norsville for four years beginning in 1869. He then became a salesman for the Singer Sewing Machine Company, engaging in this occupation until 1883, when his health became broken and he retired. There were seven children, the eldest of whom was only a lad in short trousers. The children thus early deprived of a father's care were : James Francis, our subject ; Clara Maude, who died in September, 1895; Clem E., a farmer of Marion township; John C, of Greensburg; Charles L., who later l^ecame a railroad man with headquarters in Indianapolis; George C. employed in a furniture store, and Mary \''., who Hves in Westport with her mother. After May 20, 1882, James had to assume duties heavy for the shoul- ders of thirteen summers, and there followed days of toil and nights of dull weariness that tested the courage of the manly little fellow. He attended sch(jol until his thirteenth year, and then was oljliged to ]jut his books on the shelf and to go on errands for a storekeeper, moving to West- port that he might be near his work. The qualities that afterward made him a prosperous merchant and bank official early began to assert them- selves, and his weekly earnings were soon a very substantial increase to the family budget which was to shelter, feed and clothe six little brothers and sisters. James remained an employee of the storekeeper until he went into business for himself, which happened when he was twenty-three years of age. Then he became a merchant in the flour and feed business, continuing this for five years. On January 20, 1897, he had an opportunity to buy 740 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. out an undertaking establishment, which he did, adding to this, two months later, a furniture store. So rapidly did his business grow that new quarters became necessary, and on May 13, 1914, ground was broken for a hand- some two-story brick structure, forty-two by seventy feet. While the whole building, including two floors and basement, is used for store purposes, it is so conveniently arranged that there are two separate departments for the furniture and undertaking business, respectively. The cost of the house was over twelve thousand dollars. Thorough in everything that he does, Mr. Hamilton has spared no pains in the construction and equipment of this handsome business block, which is one of the finest in southern Indiana. A private office, a casket display and dressing room comprise the under- taking department, which maintains two funeral wagons and an ambulance besides a splendid team which is owned and kept by Mr. Hamilton. The basement is appropriately built and arranged for the display of rugs and draperies, while the third floor is taken up with furniture. The building has a modern elevator, and its own electric light and water plant. The owner carries stock valued at ten thousand dollars. The wife of Mr. Hamilton was formerly Mary i\I. Link, a daughter of John Link, of Milhousen. The marriage occurred on November 22, 1893. Their only daughter, Leona J., who is nineteen years of age, having been born on May 6, 1896, is a graduate of the Westport high school, being a member of the class of 1914. Mr. Hamilton is one of the "live wires" of Decatur county. He first plans out carefully a course of action, and, having determined upon what ought to be done, he does it. In business he is alert and progressive, as is evidenced by the fact that he belie\'es in advertising, and spends large sums of money for this purpose. As an illustration of his energy and will-power may be cited the fact that when he was ready to build, a dwelling which stood in the way was unceremoniously removed, although it had stood firmly on one spot since 1838. No higher honor can be paid to a business man by any community than to make him president of its chamber of commerce. This mark of esteem has been bestowed upon Mr. Hamilton because of his merit. Besides being the head official of the \\'estport Chamber of Commerce, he is vice- president of the First National Bank of that town, and in this capacity has added influence to the community. As it seems impossible to classify a man before we know what he believes as to politics and religion, it may be of interest to note that Mr. Hamilton is an ardent Democrat, and a member of St. Denis's Catholic DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 741 church. He is also active in the Knights of Columbus, Council 1042. Here, as in business circles, his business acumen, as well as the qualities which go to make up the sort of man we respect, make him a leader. He becomes a power in whatever organization or movement to which he gives his name. In all of the activities of her husband Mrs. Hamilton has been per- haps a silent, but a potent partner. In the conflicts and problems of a strenuous life, it has been her pleasure to co-operate, and in making their home a real home to lighten the burdens and cares of the outside world into which every man is forced to go. It is impossible to close this summary of a man's life without paying to him a tribute not only for his character as an individual, but for his public service. It means much to a community to have within itself men who are stanch and true to their convictions as to right and wrong; men who, while building up their own fortunes, are not unmindful of the needs and misfortunes of others, and, most of all, men whose lives are guided by high moral principles and purposes. Such is the man we have endeavored to describe. SMITH B. BUSSELL. Smith B. Bussell belongs to that large colony of retired farmers of Decatur county now living in Greensburg and is himself the owner and pro- prietor of a highly productive farm of two hundred and sixty acres, sit- uated in Clay township near the Liberty church. It is only during his later years that he has been engaged in farming, his earlier years having been devoted largely to mechanical pursuits and especially to contract building, in which he was very successful. Smith B. Bussell was born on November 29, 1849, in Hamilton county, Ohio, the son of Moses and Eliza (Garrison) Bussell, natives of Florence, Kentucky, and Hamilton county, Ohio, respectively, the former of whom was born in 1800 and died in Alarch, 1857, and the latter of whom was born in 1820 and died in 1864. Moses Bussell was the son of a native- born English gentleman, who settled in Virginia, the Bussell family having been related on the paternal side to the mother of General Washington. From Virginia the family moved to Kentucky, and here the parents of Smith B. Bussell lived and died. Eliza Garrison was the daughter of Jonas and Priscilla Garrison, early settlers in Hamilton county, Ohio. The great- grandfather of Mr. Bussell, Joseph Garrison, entered land where the court 742 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. house now stands. Finding this land very wet and flat, he later moved to higher land. Moses and Eliza Bussell had a family of seven sons, three of whom, Joseph, the eldest; John, the third, and Thomas, the sixth; are deceased. The others are Erastus, of Wichita, Kansas; Smith B., the sub- ject of this sketch; George, who lives in Greensburg, and Ezra, who lives in Cleves, Hamilton county, Ohio. Being only eight years old at the time of his mother's death. Smith B. Bussell grew up among strangers and was compelled to shift for himself. Coming to Decatur county in 1870, having learned the mechanic's trade in Cincinnati, he worked as a Ijuilder until 1S80, a period of ten years, and then engaged in general contract building until 1900, a period of twenty years, specializing during this period in the construction of foundations. For six years he was superintendent of the Greensburg Limestone Company. Since 1900 Mr. Bussell has been engaged in farming. In the meantime, he has invested his savings in farm real estate, and now owns two hundred and sixty acres near the Liberty church in Clay township, where general farming and stock raising are carried on. Mr. Bussell has been twice married, the first time in 1872, two years after coming to this county, to Mary Foster, of Greensburg, who was born in Gallipolis, Ohio, and who died in February, 191 1. She was the mother of three children, two of whom died in infancy. William, the first-born, died in April, 1912, about one year after his mother's death, at the age of thirty-nine, he having been born in 1873. At the time of his death he was a member of the Decatur county board of commissioners and a large farmer. He left a widow, who before her marriage was Margaret Emmert, and one daughter, Helen Catherine. Harry and Louis, the other two chil- dren born to Smith B. and Mary Bussell, died at the age of four months and six weeks, respectively. In September, 1912, Mr. Bussell was married again to Gertrude Kerr, a native of Greensburg and the daughter of David R. Kerr. Mr. Bussell has always been actively attached to the principles of the Democratic party and its candidates. For sixteen years he served as a member of the Greensburg city council. He is a member. of the Baptist church, while fraternally he is a member of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows. Mv. Bussell is well known in this county and he commands the confidence and respect of his fellow townsmen and is universally liked not only in private, but in public life. His success in business was founded upon sterling integrity, a scrupulous code of right dealings with his associates. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 743 WILLIAM G. UPDIKE. It is one of the primary purposes of this vohrnie 'to give fitting recognition to those representative men who, by their force of character, have aided in the advancement of the city or town or county in which they Hve, and by so doing, have matle such place better and more attractive for the homes of others. Based upon this premise, the man whose name heads this article is entitled to consideration, for his life has been an integral part of the community, and his energies have been directed to those measures which make for the common good. It is the altruism of such men that advances civilization, and that helps to make life worth while for the masses. William G. Updike, who belongs to one of the oldest families in America, was born on April 29, 1850, in Franklin county, and came with his parents, to Decatur county when he was eleven years of age. As a successful farmer, a county commissioner and township trustee, Mr. Updike has filled an unusually prominent place in the community. He is the son of Elijah and Matilda (Gilbreath) Updike, the former having been born on August 4, 1818, and died on May 10, 1893. Peter Updike, father of Elijah and grandfather of William G., was a native of Pennsyl- vania, and early in the country's history, packed his household goods in wagons, and brought his family to the rough timber lands of Indiana, look- ing into the uncertain and dangerous future with faith in himself and in the God of his fathers. Nor was that faith disappointed, as the after years have proven. It was in Franklin county that Elijah began his life on earth, and when he had reached manhood, he married, and made his home on a farm two miles north of Westport. His wife, whose maiden name was Matilda Gilbreath, was twice married, and was, at the time of her marriage to Elijah Updike, the widow of a Mr. Luse. She had a daughter, Nancy J. Luse, now deceased. Matilda Updike was the daughter of James Gil- breath, whose enterprising spirit and ambition brought him from bonnie Scotland to this country when he was still a young man. He had a reputa- tion in all the country round for his honesty and integrity, and his good ■ business ability. His daughter, Matilda, was born in 1834, and passed away on July i, 1889. The farm on which Mr. and Mrs. Updike, Sr., settled iia 1861, became their life-long home. Their children, four in number, were William G., the subject of this sketch; Mary Ann, wife of Isaac Shera, of Westport; Frank M., of Butler county, Ohio, antl John Reiley, who died, when two years of age, in Franklin county. I 744 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. The father of this notable family believed that children should be brought up with industrious habits, and practical training, and with the help of his faithful wife, taught them the principles of good farming, as well as their application. Thus it was that the first-born, William, came to love the farm, and made it his home for fifty years. After the death of the senior Updike, the homestead was divided, and one hundred acres became the share of William. These lands he continued to improve until his became one of the most prized farms in the county. As a country home, also, it was most attractive. On the 20th of December, 1883, Mr. Updike was united in marriage to Louisa Armstrong, daughter of Robert Armstrong, and a sister of F. D. Armstrong. Her birth date was on June 17, 1862, and the place. Sand Creek township. To these parents two children were born, Charles C, the eldest, is now a resident of St. Paul, Indiana, where he teaches in the high school. After graduating from the Letts Corner high school, he studied at the Terre Haute State Normal, showing in all of his work a high grade of scholarship, and a special adaptability to the teaching profession. Charles Updike was born on February 23, 1885, and will graduate at Danville, Indiana, in the class of 1915, and will teach at Milroy, Indiana, and Mabel, who is attending the Westport high school, was born on August 5, 1900. Farm work is rather strenuous for one in good health, and when there is any impairment of the physical organism, it may become a burden. Find- ing that his health was not equal to the duties of farm life, Mr. Updike left the country in 1912, and, with his devoted wife and family, took up their residence in a beautiful, modern home in Westport, later selling their farm. Since his removal, Mr. LTpdike has enjoyed comparative freedom from activity, and has given part, at least, of his time to those pursuits to which his tastes attracted him. Always interested in whatever would advance the well-being of his home town, Mr. Updike creditably filled the position of township trustee, serving for a term of five years. He then was elected to the office of county commissioner, his term expiring on January i, 1909. \\''hen his official duties were completed, there was general regret, for it was recognized that the affairs of the township and county had been handled in an admirable way, and that his duties had been discharged with honor and efficiency. Mr. Updike is a Republican. Both ]\Ir. and ]\Irs. Updike are members of the Baptist church, and here as elsewhere, both have been not only nominal members of the organization, but adherents to the faith in reality, for they have contributed in many practical ways to the welfare of the church. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 745 Mrs. Updike, by her devotion to her home and family, has been a real inspiration to the efforts of husband and children, and has had a share in their success. Mr. Updike is a prominent member of the Free and Accepted Masons, and of the Knights of Pythias. W. T. .STOTT & COMPANY. The department store of W. T. Stott & Company is one of the con- spicuous places in the business section of Westport, and since its establish- ment by the honored father of the present owners has added much to the commercial prestige of the town in which it is located. While the careers of both William T. and J. C. have been interesting, they may be better understood by a perusal of the life of their father, the late Capt. William T. Stott, than whom Westport has never had a more enterprising merchant nor a more loyal citizen. As a tradesman he was just, honorable and kind, and as a man his influence transcended the usual limitations, for he was called upon to serve his country, which he did with an honor and bravery well worthy of emulation. William Taylor Stott, Jr., was the second son born to Capt. W. T. Stott and his wife, Caroline Bennett. Captain Stott was born in October, 1840, in Jennings county, and died in August 8, 1912, in Greensburg, having lived a life of signal usefulness. He was the son of Christopher and Elizabeth (Daily) Stott, natives of Kentucky and A"ir- ginia, respectively, who early came to Jennings county to make their future home. About the year 1846 they removed to Decatur county, where they began farm life in Sand Creek township. But this was interrupted later by the call to arms which took the young man into many battles, for he enlisted in Company B, Fifty-second Regiment, Indiana Volunteer Infantry, and served for four years, becoming captain of his company. He distin- guished himself in many battles and engagements. At the close of the Civil War, Captain Stott engaged in the drug business, continuing until about 1875, his store being in Westport. Then he was appointed deputy internal revenue collector, a position which he filled with credit for a num- ber of years. Elected sheriff of Decatur county in 1896, and re-elected two years later, he served in that capacity until the end of his term, and then bought out the well-know-n firm of Davis & Littell and took his sons into partnership with him. Captain Stott was by nature a politician, and took great interest in politics, being a Republican and a leader in his party. He b 746 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. was honest and fair, and an advocate of clean political standards. A mem- ber of the Christian church, although he lived a busy life, he found time for worship, and he and his wife brought up their children to respect mat- ters pertaining to religion. An ardent patriot, he was prominent in the Grand Army of the Republic post, of which he not only was commander, but whose ofifices he filled at various times. He was also a member of the Westport Free and Accepted Masons, joining the Masonic lodge when he was only twenty-one years of age. Captain Stott's wife, who was before her marriage Caroline Bennett, was his helpmeet and inspiration in all matters of interest to him, and while he was active in the outward world of affairs, she looked after the home and the happiness of her family with devotion and true womanly unselfish- ness. She was born in 1845 and died in February, 1877. Her birthplace was in Decatur county. The children of Mr. and Mrs. Stott, Sr., were four in number, Charles A. became a farmer and lives in Sand Creek town- ship, one mile south of Westport ; the second son was William Taylor, born on May 20, 1870, to whom we shall again refer; Elizabeth is the wife of Jacob Binninger, of Greensburg; James Clarence, November 26, 1875, and was reared in Westport. He, like his father, is a Republican, a member of the Christian church and of the lodge of Free and Accepted Masons. He was married on July 17, 1895, ^o Mary Elizabeth Brown of Decatur county, and to them were born seven childern, namely: Paul T., Chris- topher, Benjamin H., Gertrude and Gladys, twins, born in 1904, Dorothy and Verd. Since going into business with their father in 1902, both W. T. and J. C. Stott have put into practice those princi])les \Ahich cannot fail to bring success. Their large department store carries an immense stock of general merchandise to meet the demands of the trade, which has become especially heavy since the store has occupied the two-story brick block into which the goods were placed in 1910. Much of the success of this firm is due to the energy and ability of its senior member, William T. Stott, who is considered one of the repre- sentative business men of Westport. He, like his father, is a man of sterling honesty, fair and just in his business relations, and ecjually fair and just as a friend. Pie has identified his interests with those of his native town, and has been one of the leading public-spirited men of the community. He is a Republican, a member of the Christian church and a prominent member of the Free and Accepted Masons. The ability of the members of the firm of W. T. Stott & Company DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 747 has given them a distinctive place in the commercial life of the town in which they were born and reared, and the sons, who are now the owners, by their strict adherence to principle, and by their honorable, upright deal- ing, have been a decided impetus to the community to which their family has contributed in no small degree. FRANCIS M. ALLISON. W'hen the family of Francis M. Allison, a well-known and prosperous retired farmer of Adams township, this county, gather about the hospitable board at his pleasant home in the village of St. Paul, there are fifty there assembled. He is the father of thirteen children, all of whom are living, well and strong, and who, with their respective wives and husbands and their children and grandchildren, constitute the even half hundred when gathered with their father, who also is a great-grandfather. This undoubt- edly is the largest collective family, all living and in good health, ever reared in Decatur county, a distinction of which Mr. Allison, naturally enough, is quite proud. The mother of these children died in 1908 and since 191 1 Mr. Allison has been living somewhat retired in the village of St. Paul, though still giving close attention to the operation of his e.xcellent farm. Both he and his wife were of excellent pioneer stock and their numerous j^rogeny gives assurance to the future that this stock long will persist in this county, to the no small gain of the community at large. Francis M. Allison was born at old St. Omar, this county, on Novem- ber 16, 1847, the son of John and Elizabeth (Zeigler) Allison, the former of whom was born in March, 1913, and died in August, 1882, and the latter of whom was born in 1816 and died in December, 1881. John Allison was born in Washington county. Virginia, the son of Matthew Allison, who was born and reared in Bucks county, Pennsylvania, where he married, emigrat- ing thence to A'irginia, later going to Ivnoxville, Tennessee ; emigrating from that point in 1822 to Indiana, locating in Orange township. Rush county, on the banks of Big Flatrock. He also owned land over the county hne, in Adams township, this county, which he sold in 1834. His wife, wbo was a Mrs. Cline, died in 1822. Elizabeth Zeigler was born in Butler county, Ohio, the daughter of Peter Zeigler, who came to Decatur county in 1819 or 1820. He first entered land on Michigan road in Washington township. On this tract he built a log cabin and proceeded to clear the timber away. Upon improving this tract he sold the same and then entered 1 748 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. another tract just west of St. Omar, on which he spent the remainder of his hfe, his death occurring in 1874. His grandson, James W. AlHson, now owns the farm originally entered by Mr. Zeigler in this county in 1821. John AlHson was reared on the paternal farm in Rush county and, upon finishing his schooling, taught school for three years. He bought a farm two miles west of St. Paul, which, in 1861, he sold, moving to the state of Iowa, where he remained until 1866, in which year he returned to Decatur county, locating in the village of St. Paul, where he spent the- rest of his life. To his union with Elizabeth Zeigler there were born the following children : Charles, who was killed by an accident at the age of eleven years ; Mrs. Salina Courtleyou, who was born on February 24, 1836, lives in Des Moines, Iowa; Francis M., the immediate subject of this sketch; Mrs. Alice McCain, of St. Paul, this county; James W., who lives at Essex, Illinois; Mrs. Jessie Wilson, of St. Paul, this county, and Mrs. May Kurr, also of St. Paul. Francis I\I. Allison received his education in the district schools and was reared to the life of the farm. In 1S71 he bought a farm of sixty- eight acres in Adams township and in 1874 bought a small farm on Flat- rock creek. From 1876 to 1882 he lived on a farm of eighty acres in Orange township. Rush county. In 1881 he bought the old William A. Pearce farm of two hundred and seventeen acres in Adams township, which was entered from the government in 1821, and in 19 12 sold this farm to his brother, James W. Allison. For one year he then owned the old Jona- than Paul farm at the edge of the village of St. Paul, which he sold and in September, 19 14, bought a farm of two hundred and two and one-half acres on Little Flatrock, which he still owns and which he is operating very successfully, though not occupying, he having made his home in St. Paul since the year 191 1. On October 5, 1870, Francis M. Allison was united in marriage to Mary A. Garrett, who was born in Orange township, Rush county, Indiana, on August I, 1848, the daughter of Wesley Garrett, who died on December 5, 1908. To this union there were born thirteen children, as follow: Dr. Charles D., a physician of South Bloomington, Illinois, on August 10, 1871, was graduated from Indiana Medical College in 1896, married Mary Mina Apple, of Adams township, this county, and has four children, Nina, Mary, Charles and Caroline; Elizabeth, January 17, 1873, married Albert A. Green, of Colorado Springs, Colorado, and has two children. Earl and Helen; Mary, April 4, 1874, married Daniel Apple, a farmer living east of St. Omar, in this county, and has six children, Ethel (who married Livy DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 749 Adams), George, Gladys, Charles, Forrest and Caroline; Katy, November 2, 1876, married Otto Owen, of Reddick, Illinois, and has four children, Scott, Russell, Helen and Mary; Myrtle, September 2, 1878, married Otis Doggett; of Adams township; Dr. Francis M., July 13, 1880, a graduate of Indiana Medical College, practicing medicine at Gardner, Illinois, mar- ried Mayme Allison and has one child, Francis; Anna, April 27, 1882, mar- ried Ernest Tevis, of Adams township and has one child, Francis; Fannie, September 25, 1883, married George Burtscher, of Chicago; Ernest W., who operates the home farm in Adams township. May 23, 1886, married Nellie Shelhorn and has two children, Mabel and Caryl; Dorthy, April 23, i'888, married Cleve Archie, of Mt. Victory, Ohio, and has two children, James Francis and Robert Allison; Ethel, December 2, 1890, married Orba Land, of Adams township, and has one child, Carlos Allison; Bessie, Feb- ruary 17, 1892, married Walter Tonyes, of Richland township, Rush county, and has one child, Mary Elizabeth, and Marguerite, February 8, 1893, who is her father's housekeeper in their pleasant home in St. Paul. Mr. Allison is a friend of all churches and does his part toward the promotion of the best interests of his community. He is a stanch Demo- crat, as was his father before him, and is regarded as a leader in the ranks of that party in Jackson township. He was elected township trustee in 1886 and was re-elected in 1888, his service in that connection having been of large benefit to the township. He is active in lodge work, being a mem- ber of the Masonic lodge at Waldron; of the Knights of Pythias lodge at St. Paul and of the lodge of the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks at Greensburg, in all of which lodges he is very popular, his genial dispo- stiion making him friends wherever he goes. JACOB EMMERT. The conspicuous success which has come to the venerable Jacob Emmert, a retired farmer and miller of Clarksburg, Indiana, is by no means a matter of accident, since he has from the beginning of his career ■ approached the problems of the farm and the problems of the milling busi- ness with the scientific insight of one who knows that the smaller the cost of operation the larger the profit. His methodical precision in mastering the details of lausiness seems to have been a natural endowment. Personal successes frequently can be explained on no other hypothesis than that the 750 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. ^ individual is possessed of a superior ability. It is not ditiicult to explain the success of those men who were favored by inheritance or accidental good fortunate, but Jacob Emmert does not belong to this class of successful men, since he came to Clarksburg as a poor man and has become a- wealthy citizen by his own individual and personal effort. Jacob Emmert was born seventy-si.x years ago, on April 19, 1839, m Bavaria, Germany, the son of Christopher and Elizabeth Emmert, who seven years after the birth of Jacob came to America and located on a farm in the state of Maryland. From Maryland they removed to Wilmington, Delaware, where Christopher worked in a mill. Eight years after coming to America they remo\ed to Lawrenceburg, Indiana, and the father, who worked in a flour-mill, died in that city, .\lthough this part of Jacob Emmert's career may appear uneventful to the superficial observer, never- theless it probably was the most e\entful period of his life, since about this time he was learning the business in which he was tu become so prominent in later life. One of a family of eight children, it is quite natural that Jacob had to begin to shift for himself at an early age. Three of his brothers, Peter, John and Fred, and his two sisters, Elizabeth and Cath- erine, are deceased. He has one living brother. Philip, who has been a merchant in Lawrenceburg, Indiana, for sixty years. Leaving home at the age of sixteen years, in 1855. Mr. Emmert first operated a mill at Harrison, Oliio, for two years, and during the succeed- ing two years was engaged in operating another mill two miles north of Elizabethtown, Ohio. This was a water-mill. During the first two months of 1859 he was engaged in operating a steam-mill at Guilford, and for a short time later was at Greensburg. I'rom Greensburg he re.noved to Dear- born county, and there operated a water-mill for John Emmert at Dills- boro for two years'. In 1862 Mr. Emmert went to Fairland in Shelby county, Indiana, and was engaged in the milling business there for two years, when he returned to Greensburg, where he remained until the fall of 1869, at that time purchasing a mill which had been owned by a com- pany of men who had failed. Purchasing the plant at an assignee's sale, for nearly fifty years he has been engaged in manufacturing flour, grinding grain and sawing luml)cr. The mill, which is operated for custom and local trade, is now run by Mr. Emmert's son, Clinton Buell Emmert. It is equipped with all the latest machinery and operated by a gas engine at a cost of five cents an hour. The roller processes are employed, and two well- known local brands of flour, the "White Loaf" and "Blue Ribbon," are mamifactured. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 75 1 When Jacob Einmert came to Clarksburg he first purchased sixty-five acres of land for which he went into debt. Later he purchased one liun- dred and forty acres for credit and subsequently eighty acres additional. He now has one of the most fertile farms in Decatur county, and Ijy crup rotation and intelligent farming he has developed the land to a very high state of productivity. Practically all of the land was very much run down at the time he purchased it. The previous owners had grown great quan- tities of corn year after year and had robbed the land of its fertility. By farming the land systematically and rotating his crops, Mr. Emmert has had a splendid success. He followed a three-year rotation plan until the wheat grew so tall that it was necessary to raise corn two years in succes- sion. Land which had grown thirty-five to forty bushels of com to the acre, and yielded fifteen bushels of wheat to the acre, under Mr. Emmert's care and management now produces from sixty to eighty bushels of corn to the acre and from twenty to thirty bushels of wheat. At the present time he has two hundred and sixty-four acres of land which is operated for the most part li}- his son, John Leslie. The farm is equipped and well supplied with all necessary outbuildings. Jn 1913 he fed sixty-nine head of cattle and two hundred head of hogs. He also sold fifty-four head of mules in the home market and sold his cattle in Buffalo, New York. At the present time he has forty-four head of cattle, sixteen head of young mules and one hundred and fifty head of hogs. Mr. Emmert's neighbors, who have fol- lowed his methods in farming, have all prospered, and many owe much of their success to the example he has set in this community. On No\-eml)er 2"/, 1861, Jacob Emmert was married in Greensburg to Catherine Hauk, the daughter of William and IMargaret Hauk. Born on October 3, 1841, Mrs. Emmert passed away in 1901, leaving a family of six children, five of whom are living. Of these children, Carrie is the wife of Luther D. Hamilton and was born on October u, 1862; Clinton Buell. who is now engaged in operating the Emmert mill, was born on July 14, 1864, and on May 17, 1893, he was married to Alhe Patterson; they have one child, James Allen, who is a student at the Sweetwater military school ; Mrs. Svlvia Senior, April 12, 1867, has one child. Merlin; Ellison, March 8, 1869, died on December 17, 1888; John Leslie, April 30, 1871, was mar- ried on November 27, 1895, to Ada Thornton Dobyns, and they have one chiki, Mabel, and Ruby Leona, September 18, 1886, lives at home and is keeping house for her father. Jacob Emmert has been a life-long Rejnib'ican. Four years, from 1888 to 1892, he served as trustee of Fugit township. .A. member of the -752 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Presbyterian church, he has filled all the offices in the local congregation. Fraternally he is a member of Clarksburg Lodge No. 124. Free and Accepted Masons. He became a ilason at Fairland in Shelby county, fifty-three years ago, transferring his membership from Fairland to Greensburg and from thence to Clarksburg. For ten years he served as treasurer of the Clarksburg lodge. Decatur county has few citizens who have been more industrious and more enterprising than the venerable Jacob Emmert. His acquaintance extends not only throughout Decatur county, but he is well known in all of the adjoining counties, and occupies an enviable place in the hearts of his neighbors and fellow townsmen. AMiile he has lived an industrious and honest man, he has in many ways contributed to the happiness and comfort of the people with whom he has come in contact and is honored by them todav as a kind and generous friend. 1 WILLIAM M. ANGLE. In Fugit township, Decatur county, Indiana, where the venerable Will- iam Angle has lived for nearly sixty years, or since he was sixteen years old, he is known far and wide for his unaided and heroic struggle for per- sonal success. It is natural that he should be well known in this township on account of his long residence, but he is especially well known on account of the large measure of success which fortune has \'isited on his efforts. Every one who is at all familiar with history knows that money is far easier to obtain now than it was a half century ago. Most eveiy one knows further, that not one young man in fifty has a thousand dollars which he himself earned and saved at the time of reaching his majority. Yet, the ven- erable William Angle, who attained his majority early in 1861, had by that time saved out of his own earnings fifteen hundred dollars, which lie had given to his father. No one is able to say that \\'illiam M. Angle has neglected his personal or immediate duties in his race for a fortune. Before his career as a farmer and financier had really begun he not only made a handsome gift of his earnings to his father, but he had cared for him in his declining years, when he was compelled to lean upon the stronger shoulders of his son, and, at his death, had paid all of the bills incurred during his last and fatal illness. More than anything else, this noble act proved what manner of man William ;\f. Angle is. It shows that the successes of his DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 753 career were founded upon a just and fair realization of his nearest Und dearest duties. It is no wonder, therefore, that he occupies a position among his neiglibors and fellow citizens as a man who has worthily dis- charged his obligations in all the responsible relations of life. The venerable William M. Angle, retired farmer of Fugit township, Decatur county, Indiana, is a native of Laurel, Kentucky, having been born seventy-five years ago in February, 1840. His parents, William and Eby (Sutherlin) Angle, were both natives of southern states, the former of Tennessee and the latter of Kentucky. Believing that they would find greater opportunities in the newer land north of them, they emigrated in 1856 to Indiana and settled east of Clarksburg, where they lived until their deaths. Several of tlieir fourteen children died in infancy, leaving only eight who accompanied them to Indiana. Of these eight children, William, the subject of this sketch, and his sister, Priscilla, of Fairmount, Indiana, are now the only ones living. In the first three years of the last half of the nineteenth century, agri- cultural conditions did not compare with conditions today, especially from the standpoint of getting cjuick returns for one's labor. Nevertheless, Will- iam Angle, who began life on his own account when twenty years of age, rented land in Decatur county, and saved most of the money left after the expenses of farming were paid. During this period of his life he found it a pleasant task to care for his aged father and in giving his father fifteen hundred dollars which he earned before he was twenty-one years old. In 1870, when he was thirty years old, Mr. Angle purchased his first tract of land, paying one thousand dollars in cash and agreeing to pay twenty-eight hundred dollars additional as fast as he was able to make and save the money. In eight years he was able completely to relinquish the debt, so that by 1878 he was well started on the road to fortune. In Feb- ruary, 1909, he purchased a ninety-five-acre farm in Rush county, paying nine thousand dollars in cash for this land. His home farm in Fugit town- ship consists of fifty-three acres, so that he owns altogether one hundred and forty-nine acres in Decatur and Rush counties. Aside from this land, which is conservatively estimated to be worth fifteen thousand dollars, Mr. Angle owns five thousand dollars' worth of stocks and bonds, which are gilt-edge in every respect and which pay him handsome dividends and inter- est. It is fair to say that he is today worth not less than twentv thousand dollars, every cent of which he has made himself, and saved out of his own personal earnings. This is a splendid record and one of which he has e\'ery (48) 754 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. reason to be proud. In fact, his neighbors in Fugit township and the people with whom he has come in contact during Hfe are Hkewise proud of him and his achievements. On March 17, 1875, when he was thirty-five years old, William Angle was married to Mary Ann Evans, who was bom on December 9, 1845, and who is five years his junior. Mrs. Angle is a native of Franklin county and the daughter of James Evans, who married Lydia Weston. They also were natives of Franklin county, and the son and daughter of old families of this section of the state. Mr. and Mrs. Angle have no children. It could hardly be expected that William Angle, in view of his large success as a farmer and financier, and in view of his busy life, has ever been able to devote very much time to political affairs. However, he is a Republican in politics, but contents himself with voting the ticket of his party and leaving such matters as organization and the management of campaigns to others. Mr. and Mrs. Angle have long been members of the Presbyterian church, and are devout in this faith. THOMAS N. SHAW. Retirement from business does not necessarily indicate an inactive life. It often means that the mind released from strenuous business cares can turn its attention to other matters equally worth while, and often more important to the public good than the amassing of wealth. To be a repre- sentative farmer among other successful farmers, a man must possess many forceful traits of character, and the fact that he begins life as the son of a wealthy landowner does not, as in the present case, detract one iota from the credit due him as a financier. In these days of sharp competition, it is quite as difficult to retain a fortune as to- make it, and therefore, while Thomas N. Shaw may be considered more than ordinarily fortunate, it would seem, nevertheless, that commendation is due. Nor has he been unmindful of the needs of others. Thomas N. Shaw, retired farmer of Westport, was born on January 6, 1855, in Jackson township. Mr. Shaw's father, whose name also was Thomas, was brought up by his grandfather, for his own father died when the younger Thomas was an infant. The latter, who was Thomas N. Shaw's paternal grandfather, was born on December 3, 1789, and his wife, Sarah Shaw, was born on October 5, 1792. Their children were as follow: Elizabeth C, born on July 15, DECATUR COUNTYj INDIANA. 755 1814; John, February 23, 1816; Sarah, December i, 1817, and others, including Thomas, the father of Thomas N. The birth of the latter occurred on July 3, 1821, and he passed away in 1905. He was a native of Franklin county, going to Decatur county when only a young boy. In early man- hood, he married JNIargaret Ann Wilson, who was a native of Indiana, and died in November, 1904. Thomas Shaw, Sr., was the owner of a splendid farm in Jackson township, consisting of three hundred and eighty acres, and of one hundred and eighty acres in Sand Creek township, and was one of the large landowners of the entire county. Thomas N. Shaw had two brothers and two sisters, as follow: John S., who lives in Greensburg; Martha E. Swope, of Fowler, Indiana; Samuel S., deceased, was a farmer, and Mary E. Mclnwain, also dead. Thomas N. Shaw, Jr., was the young- est of his family. His boyhood home was at the northeast corner of the home section of Jackson township, while his own farm is in the southwest corner of the same section. In July, 1875, he was imited in marriage to Louisa, daugh- ter of Eli and Catherine Risley Bake, a wealthy landowner of Decatur county. Besides Mrs. Shaw, their other children are, Lewis S., Amanda J., Clarissa, Cordelia, Olive P., Lorinda, Martha A., William H., Pearl, wife of Dr. Will E. Thomas, of Clarksburg, who became the parents of two children, Ricliard Shaw and Mary Louise. Upon their marriage, the father of Mr. Shaw presented him with one thousand dollars, and his wife received a similar amount from her parents, and with this they purchased the land upon which they lived until 1912. The original tract consisted of ninety acres to which the}' later added sev- enty acres, which farm is so well equipped in evei-y way that it easily attracts the attention of travelers, and is considered one of the finest in the county. It now contains a splendid house, which the}' built in 1884, although when the young people first moved in, they occupied a one-room log cabin. It was necessary to go in debt, but that encumbrance has long ago been paid off. A large, two-story brick house replaces the primitive log cabin, and a spacious barn is modern in every respect. In 1912, the owner added to its attractiveness as well as to its intrinsic value by enclosing the grounds, within four hundred rods, with wire fencing, braced by substantial stone posts. In this year, also, the family removed to Westport, desiring this progressive little town as a place of residence. Mr. Shaw has always been interested in the affairs of the Republican party of which he has been a life-long member. He and his wife and 756 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. daughter have a great many friends, and theirs is considered one of the important and hospitable home of the community. ReHevcd from active participation in the arduous labors of farm work, Mr. and Mrs. Shaw can enjoy a leisure deserved by reason of their years of service to their family, and it is hoped by their many friends that many more years will be spared to them, years that may be fruitful in both pleas- ure and achievement. DANIEL JEFFERSON B.\LL.\RD, M. D. For many years a practicing ph)-sician in the pleasant village of St. Paul, Decatur county, an honored \eteran of the Ci\il War, active in church and lodge circles and a leader in the fast diminishing ranks of the Grand Army of the Republic in this part of the state, there are few men in this county who have a wider acquaintance or better friends than the \enerable Doctor Ballard, whose name the reader notes abo\'e. Of fine old pioneer stock, Doctor Ballard ever has sought to maintain the best traditions of his sterling ancestry, and has been for many years regarded as a leader in that section of the county in which he has lived since boyhood. Doctor Ballard's wife, who is a daughter of the oldest man in Adams township, also is of stalwart pioneer stock and has been a most efficient factor in the develop- ment of the best interests of her home town. For many years she has been a registered pharmacist and has assisted her husljand in the operation of a drug store at St. Paul. Previous to taking up pharmacy, Mrs. Ballard had been a school teacher, and in that capacity her i-nfluence was such as to leave a lasting impression upon the cultural life of her home vicinity. Daniel Jefferson Ballard, M. D., was born on a farm in Orange town- ship. Rush county, Indiana, not far over the line from Decatur county, on October (S, 1841, the son of Madison and Sarah Ann (Tevis) Ballard, the former of whom was born on March 13, 1814. and died on March 15, 1888, and the latter of whom was born on February 25, 1822, and died on January 18, 1883. Madison Ballard was born in Virginia, the son of Elijah Ballard, born in 1777, who came to Indiana in 1825, settling in Rush county, where he spent the remainder of his life. Madison Ballard became a well-known and influential farmer in Rush countv, where he made his home until 1877, in which year he moved to St. Paul, this county, where his last days were spent. By his marriage to .Sarah Ann Tevis six children were born, Daniel DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 757 J., the subject of this sketch; Mrs. Catherine Raynes, who hves in llhnois; John Durbin, who hves in ShelbyviUe, this state, and Mary Ehzabeth, Sarah Helen and JMellender, the last three named of whom are deceased. Being the eldest of the family and it being necessary for him to aid in the work of the farm during the days of his youth, Daniel J. Ballard received little schooling in his boyhood, his attendance being limited to about three months in a year during the winter seasons. He was not twenty years of age when the Civil War broke out, but on September i8, 1861, he enlisted in Company E, Thirty-se\enth Regiment. Indiana Volunteer Infantry, for service in that great struggle between the states. In 1862 he was transferred to the First Battalion, Pioneer Brigade of Engineers, in which service he was engaged for two years, and was discharged with his regiment on October 26, 1864. Tb.ough engaged in some of the fiercest battles of the war. Doctor Ballard never was wounded, though on numerous occasions bullets passed through his clothing. Among the notable battles in which he participated may be mentioned Stone's River, Chickamauga, Missionary Ridge, Peachtree Creek, Atlanta and Jonesboro. Doctor Ballard was discharged with the rank of corporal. .\t the close of the war Doctor Ballard determined to pursue the studies which he had been compelled to neglect in his boyhood, and he attended school at St. Paul and at Shelbyx'ille, after which for a few years he taught school in St. Paul, beginning as primary teacher and ending as principal. Thus fortified, he took up the study of medicine and, after a period of pre- paratory reading, entered the Cincinnati College of Medicine and Surgery, from which institution he was graduated in February, 1876. He immedi- ately entered upon the practice of his profession in the village of St. I'aul and for forty years has been thus engaged, during the past twenty-one years of which time he also operated a drug store in the village. On September 18, 1867, Doctor Ballard was united in marriage to .Anna E. French, who was born in Liberty township, Shelby county, this state, on February 15, 1846, daughter of Joseph R. French, a native of that county, who was born in 1825, the son of Daniel French, who settled in Shelby county in 1820. Joseph R. French enjoys the distinction of being the oldest citizen of Adams township, this county. Since 1856 he has resided in the village of St. Paul, having always lived in the neighborhood, with the exception of four years s])ent at Moores Hill, when his son was attending the college at that puint. Mr. l^-ench was a saddler during his active year, and in his old age turned his attention to the cultivation of 758 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. raspberry slips and other hothouse plants, but is now retired. Mr. French's wife was Catherine Zeigler, a member of a pioneer family of this part of the state, who was born in 1824 and died in November, 1902. To their union five children were born, namely: Anna E., who married Doctor Ballard; Mrs. Sarah Elizabeth Plymate, who lives at Acton, this state; ]\lrs. Amy Celeste Derbyshire, of St. Petersburg, Florida ; Harriet Jane, who died in girlhood, and William Henry Harrison. Anna E. French began teaching school when she was thirteen years of age and taught until she was twenty years of age, at which time, follow- ing her marriage to Doctor Ballard, she took up the study of chemistry, with particular reference to pharmacy, and for twenty years has been a registered pharmacist, being an invaluable aid to her husband in the opera- tion of the drug store at St. Paul. To Dr. Daniel J. and Anna E. (French) Ballard three children have been born, only one of whom is living, namely : Harry \V., an artist, who resides in St. Paul, married Fannie Floyd and they have one child, a son. Jack Floyd; Daniel Arthur, who died on April 10, 1879, at the age of two years and five months, and Joseph Clarence, who died in a St. Louis hos- pital on March 2, 1902, at the age of twenty-three years, three months and twenty-seven days. Joseph C. Ballard was graduated from Purdue Uni- versity and at the time of his death was engaged as a chemist in a steel plant at St. Louis. Doctor and Mrs. Ballard are meml:)ers of the Methodist church and are active in the good works of the communit}' in which they so long have labored. Doctor Ballard was a Republican until the year 191 2, in which year he transferred his political allegiance to the Progressive party. He is a member of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows and the Knights of Pythias lodges at St. Paul and a leader in the local post of the Grand Army of the Republic. Formerly he took an active part in the affairs of the medical associations to which he was attached, but of late years is gradually relaxing some of his aforetime activities. He was a member of the Decatur County Medical Association and the Indiana State Medical Association, in the affairs of both of which societies he took an earnest interest. Mrs. Bal- lard also formerly was active in the work of the Pythian Sisters and of the Daughters of Rebekah, having filled all the chairs in the local lodges of those orders and served as delegate to the grand lodges of the same. Doctor and Mrs. Ballard, by reason of their useful lives in and about St. Paul, are held in the highest esteem thereabouts, being regarded with the greatest respect by the entire community. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 759 CYRUS D. MARVVOOD. Cyrus D. Harwood, for fourteen years secretary and treasurer of the St. Paul Gas Company, was born on j\Iay 20, i860, in Dearborn county, Indiana, the son of Ebenezer and CaroHne ( Sumpter j Harwood, the former of whom was a native of Dearborn county. He and his wife were suc- cessful farmers in that county. Cyrus D. Harwood, who died on August 15, 1913, came to Decatur county when a small lad, probably five or six years old. They settled in Shelby county for a short time and then moved to Adams township, Deca- tur county, settling near St. Omer. In 1863 Ebenezer Harwood enlisted in the Union army and served until June 2"], 1864, when he died at Knoxville, Tennessee. He was a brave and efficient soldier, and was one among the thousands of patriotic citizens who gave up their lives in the cause of human freedom. At his death he left a wife and five children, the names of four of whom are herewith given, Mrs. Susan Pope, of Milford; Mrs. Mary Wilson, of Milford; Thomas, of Illinois; James of Bloomfield, Missouri; and Cyrus D., the sub- ject of this sketch. The late Cyrus D. Harwood grew to manhood at St. Omer and when about fifteen years of age his mother married again, after which time Cyrus D. went to Illinois, where he took a position with a mining company, which he held for several years. He became postmaster at Bartly, Illinois, and for some three or four years was engaged in the mercantile business at that town. About 1887 '^r. Harwood, after a trip west made in order to regain his health, came back to Decatur county and was married to Julia Short, March 29, 1888, a daughter of Joseph and Nancy (Gulley) Short, the former of whom was born on Flatrock river, Adams township, Decatur county, Indiana, and where he lived until his death on February 26, 1911. Nancy (Gulley) Short was born in .Shelby county and came to Decatur county when a child and lived here all of her life, where her father was a farmer. Her father and mother died within three weeks of each other, the mother on February 5, 191 1, and the father on Febitiary 26, 191 1. Her father was a Republican and a member of the Baptist church. During the Civil War he was a corporal in Company D, Seventy-sixth Regiment, Indi- ana Volunteer Infantry, a patriotic citizen and a man poptilar in the neigh- borhood where he lived. 760 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. After his marriage Cyrus D. Harwood entered ijusiness at St. Omer,. but a short time after that they moved to St. Paul, where he engaged in business. During a period of about fourteen years he was secretary and treasurer of the St. Paul Gas Company. He was also a notary public and a man of unusual ability, possessed of a genial disposition, and had many friends in this county. He took a great interest in public improvements, and especially in the improvement of his own town, where Mrs. Harwood, his widow, lives at her home with her adopted daughter, Zelman, who is now a student in high school. Mrs. Harwood, who is a strong believer in education, is trying to give her adopted daughter the very best educational advantages. Mrs. Harwood taught school for six year previous to her mar- riage and is a cultured and refined woman. She has a wide circle of friends in Adams township. t MORGAN L. AHERS. Emerson, in his great essay on Character, recalls the indignation of an eloquent Methodist at the kind admonition of a Doctor of Divinity — "Afy friend, a man can neither be praised nor insulted," and, indeed, in this age when the superlative is shrieking throughout the land, it would seem that even the common acceptance of the term praise had outworn its wonted use, for everything whose praises the promoters are shouting from the house- tops is either the greatest this or the greatest that that ever was. What with "the puff direct and the puff collateral and the puff' oblitpie" of the old time magnified by the megaphonic methods of the modern advertiser, praise — if, despite the eloquent Methodist whom Emerson cites, praise be possible — has overshot itself. When e^•ery thing has become alike superlative, there are no superlatives and the promoter's adjectives are regarded askance by those whose ears are assaulted by the tumult of his cries. However, there is such a thing as proper and due praise, the modest meed that merit claims, and it surelv is not ill-timed or unfitting that on such a page as this a few words be said in passing regarding the life and the ijersonality of Jtlorgan L. Miers, one of the most influential men in Decatur county, the owner of four- teen hundred acres of land in Clay township and president of the Third National Bank at Greensburg, than whom no man in the cuunty is more widely known or regarded with higher favor by his neighbors. INlr. Miers is a man of quiet, unassuming manner, of genial disposition and a philosophic turn of mind; qualities which bind his friends to him as "with hoops of DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 76 1 steel." and it properly may be said that no man in this part of the state has firmer or more devoted friends than he. Mr. Miers' grandfather, Thomas Miers, was one of the early settlers of Decatur county and for three genera- tions members of the Miers family have been prominent in the affairs of this county, their influence ever having l)een exerted in behalf of the welfare of the whole community. A brother of Mr. Miers, the Hon. Robert W. Miers, of Bloomington, this state, represented this district in Congress for eight years and in all ways the family has stood for good government and decent li\'ing; being faithful and true in all the relations of life. Morgan L. Miers was born in the year 1855 on the farm on which he now lives, one and one-half miles south of the pleasant village of Burney, in Clay township, Decatur county, Indiana, the son of Thomas S. and Mahala ( Braden ) Miers, both members of pioneer families in that section of the county. Thomas S. Miers came to this county when about seven years of age with his parents, his father, Thomas Miers, emigrating from Ohio at an earl\- day in the settlement of this county and entering from the gov- ernment a tract of land in the Burney neighljorhood, in Clay township, where the rest of his life was spent, his death occurring not luany years after he came to this county. Thomas S. Miers was reared in the pioneer home in Clay township and upon succeeding to the ownership of the farm prospered largely, gradually increasing his holdings until he became the pos- sessor of more than six hundred acres of fine land, the larger part of which he had brought under an excellent state of cultivation. Though laboring under the many and manifest disadvantages of his day and generation, Thomas S. Miers displayed much executive ability and a keen business fore- sight, becoming one of the foremost factors in the development of that part of the county in which he lived. He was a farmer of unusual skill and his farm became very profitable to him, his chief source of revenue being derived from feeding hogs, he finding that the value of the extensive crops of corn that he raised was thus largely enhanced. Thomas S. Miers was a member of the Episcopal church, a Democrat and a member of the Ma- sonic lodge at Milford. He was active in the good works of his community, inrtuential in local politics and interested in the affairs of his lodge. (3f a singularly optimistic nature, he radiated cheer wherever he went and was exceedingly popular throughout that part of the county. Ever ready to help others, he never forgot a kindness directed toward himself and it is said of him that he would go as far as anyone to accommodate a friend. Thomas S. Miers married Mahala Braden, a member of one of the pio- neer families of the county, and to this union there were born seven children,. 762 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. namely: Mary, who married Isaac Sefton, of Greensburg, this county; Robert W., of Bloomington, Indiana, former member of Congress from this district, now judge of the Monroe county circuit court; Mrs. Emma Gilmore, deceased; Morgan L., the immediate subject of this sketch; Wil- lard A., a well-known farmer of the Burney neighborhood, who owns three ' hundred and twenty acres of choice land in Clay township, is a well-known breeder of fine horses, having some time ago sold one of his trotters, "Little Snapp," for twenty-five hundred dollars; Nevada, wife of William A. Minor, of Clay township, and Alaggie B., who married Frank Stapp and lives at Hope, Indiana. Morgan L. Miers was reared on the home farm in Clay township, receiving his elementary education in the local schools, which he supple- mented by a course of four years at Indiana University and was graduated from the law department of that excellent institution. - Upon completing his education he devoted his time to the development of the growing farm interests of his father, giving his particular attention to the raising of live stock, soon becoming known as one of the heaviest shippers in the state. Recognizing the growing value of land in the neighborhood of the home acres he gradually bought land as he prospered and now owns fourteen hundred and sixty acres of choice land, all of which lies in Clay town- ship. ]\Iuch of this land, purchased for fifty dollars an acre, is now well worth one hundred and twenty-five dollars an acre, and INIr. Aliers maintains that if he had had the acunlfen to have extended his purchases during the days of cheap land thereabout he now would be a millionaire. However, he is a man of remarkably' optimistic nature, as was his father before him, and he is not worrying because of this lack of foresight years ago. In fact, he makes it a point never to worry, his genial temperament placing him above the petty worries that sometimes afllict less optimistic individuals. Though giving his chief attention to his great estate, ]\Ir. ]\Iiers has found time to extend his activities in other directions and is interested in numerous enterprises in this and adjoining counties. Since the opening of the Third National Bank of Greensburg. thirty-four years ago, ^Ir. Miers has been a director in that sound old financial institution and for the past two years has been president of the same; a position of prominence in the financial circles of southern Indiana exceeded by few therein. His sound judgment regarding values and thorough acquaintance with commercial and indus- trial conditions in this part of the state give to his opinions in connection with investments a weight of well nigh dominant force hereabouts and few iinanciers in southern Intliana have a higher standing in banking circles than DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 763 he; his enterprising spirit being sufficientl_v well balanced by a native con- serxatism to give to his decisions that unerring cjuality which business men in this section have learned to appreciate and value so highly in consulta- tions regarding investments. Thirty-three years ago Morgan L. Miers was united in marriage to Gail Hamilton, of Clay township, this county, daughter of G. M. and Mary Susan (Logan) Hamilton, members of pioneer families in Decatur county, the latter of whom was a daughter of John Logan, and to this union two children were ]:)orn, a son and a daughter, Roy, now twenty-three years of age, and Mary, now aged sixteen, the latter of whom is attending school in Boston, Massachusetts. Mrs. Miers met her death in an automobile accident on Oc- tober 20, 1914, a tragedy which plunged the entire community into mourning, for she was a woman of exceptional strength of character and for years a leader in good works in the vicinity in which her gentle influence so long had been exerted in all good ways. Mr. Miers is a member of the Methodist church and he and his son, Roy Miers, are members of the IMasonic fraternity. Mr. Miers is a Demo- crat and takes an earnest interest in the political affairs of the county, state and nation, though he never has been included in the office-seeking class, his extensive personal interests being sufficient to engage his undivided atten- tion. He is a constant exponent of good government and all measures look- ing to the advancement of the public welfare find in him an ardent champion. Energetic and public spirited, Mr. Miers is a powerful factor in general affairs hereabout and no man in the county is held in higher esteem. GEORGE M. MEEK. Of the private soldiers who belonged to the Seventh Regiment, Indiana Volunteer Lifantry, recruited during the latter months of iS6i, no one living or dead had a more valiant record in the service of his country than the venerable George M. Meek, a well-known farmer of Fugit township. Idaving enlisted on September 13, 1861. in Company G, which was for two years commanded by his brother. Capt. John Meek, and under him Lieut. Orville Thomson, he served akogether three years. In the battle of the A\'i!derness he was wounded by a shot through the right breast, a wound which has liothered him all of his life. Few soldiers participated in a greater number of severe battles than George j\L Meek, who fought at 764 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Greenbrier, Winchester, Port Republic, the second battle of Bull Run, Antietam, Gettysburg, Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, Slaughter Mountain, Virginia, and in the Wilderness campaign. After serving in every battle in which his company and regiment was engaged, he was inustered out of the ser\'ice on September 20, 1864, full of honors yet weighted with the terrible burden of military service and disabled by the ghastly wound he had received in the Wilderness. The venerable George M. IMeek, who was only eighteen years old at the time of his enlistment, was born on May 3, 1842, three miles northeast of Greensburg, the son of Adam R. and Nancy (Logan) Meek. Adam R. Meek, a native of Kentucky, was the son of Thomas Meek, and came to Decatur county in 1825, just after the settlement was beginning in this section. He was twice married. Among his eighteen children were Tay- lor, of Greensburg: John, of Kansas; Mrs. Jerusha Patton, of California; Mrs. Mollie Donnell, of Missouri; Samuel; Mrs. Minerva Bonner; Tirza Mclllvane;; Mrs. Rebecca Henry; William N., deceased; Thomas; Mrs. Laura Kincaid, deceased, and Josiah, deceased. After becoming cme of the largest landowners in Decatur county, Adam R. Meek divided his land among his children, presenting each child with eighty acres in fee simple. George M. Meek, who now owns three hundred and thirty acres of land in Fugit township, settled, after his marriage, on the eighty-acre farm given to him by his father, .\fter his marriage, he purchased the old Logan or Patton farm and in 1887 'ii'ilt his present farm home. .A few years ago he also built a home for his son. On November 26, 1883, Mr. Meek was married to Charlotte Miller, who was born on November 28, 1S60, at Clarksburg, and who is the daugh- ter of Louis C. and Elizabeth (Barneman) Miller, natives of Ohio and Germany, respectively. The)' were married in Ohio and moved from that state to Decatur county in 1857.' "Sir. and Mrs. George M. Meek have had three children, the youngest of whom died in infancy. The two living children are Thomas, a well-known farmer of this county, who married Daisy Carroll, and Mrs. Fredericka Smith, who lives near Williamstown on a farm and who has one child, Carmen. As a farmer Mr. Meek feeds a large amount of live stock, and it is principally from live stock that he has made his greatest profits in farming. During his twenty-nine years of experience in the business of farming he has made a close and careful study of its methods, and few men living in Decatur county today are better informed regarding its various phases than DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 765 he. Mr. Meek understands first the culti\'ation of the soil; he recognizes the importance of good seed and the preparation of a good seed bed. More- over, he beHeves in frequent and careful cultivation. He is not a man who sells a great deal of grain, practically everything raised on the farm in the way of grains or cereals being fed to the stock. The venerable George M. Meek comes from a distinguished family and one which has been intimate!}' identified with the history of the county since pioneer times. If nothing more, his valiant service as a soldier in our great Civil War would be sufficient to entitle him to rank as one of the foremost citizens. But as a careful, enterprising, thrifty farmer, he is quite as much a hero of peace as he was a hero of war. JOHN H. LOG.\N. John H. Logan, a successful farmer and breeder of Fugit township, who passed away in Oklahoma, where he had gone to recover his health, on March 28, 1908, was one of the best-known citizens living in this part of Decatur county. The son of Joseph A. and Mary Jane (Straney) Logan, John H. Logan was born on November 8, 1849, on the farm where he spent the most of his life. He was the son of Joseph A. Logan, as heretofore noted, who was born on January 9, 1821. and who married Mary Jane Straney, a native of Kentucky. Joseph A. was the son of Martin Logan, a pioneer in Fugit township, and a native of Kentucky. He married Nancy Martin and died in 1888. Joseph A. Logan entered the land where Ezra Kirbv now lives in 1821. His father filed the papers for this farm, which afterward passed into the possession of his son, Hugh, and is now owned by Ezra Kirby. Mrs. Mary Jane (Straney) Logan, who was born on May 12, 1824, was the daughter of Jane Brown, who was born on December 2'/, 1748, aufl who had also two other children, John Brown Straney, born on November 9, 1825, and Sarah Agnes Straney (IMayne), August 20, 1827. Joseph A. Logan was only nine months old when his father removed from Kentucky to Decatur county. Indiana, and settled on the old home- stead, where the widow of his son, John H., now lives. He and his wife had eight children. Of these children, Nancy Martin was born on March 9, 1844, married a Mr. May, now deceased; Mrs. Mary Ann Cook, Octo- ber 14, 1845; Mrs. Margaret (Findley) Manlove, August 13, 1847; John 766 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. H., is the subject of this sketch; Leander, February 9, 1853, deceased; Will- iam R., August 20, 1855, deceased; Nathan McDill Logan, September 27, 1857, and lives in I'\igit township, Luna Ames, October 23, 1865, died on January 3, 1891. After his marriage the late John H. Logan and his wife purchased the old homestead, consisting of one hundred and nineteen acres, and later bought sixty-six acres more, making in all one hundred and eighty-five acres. Upon this farm they erected a splendid modern home in 1900, and from time to time excellent outbuildings. He was a large stock raiser and feeder, and made a specialty of road horses with whicli he was very suc- cessful. In 1908 Mr. Logan went to Oklahoma for the purpose of regain- ing his health, which was fast failing, and died six years afterward. At the time of his death he not only left to his wndow and heirs the farm in Fugit township, but also a farm where he lived at the time of his death of one hundred and fifty acres southwest of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. An energetic and honorable citizen, a good business man and farmer, he was also a splendid type of the man wdio practices the Christianity wdiich he professes. If John H. Logan had any enemies at the time of his death, he did not know about it, since he lived according to the Golden Rule, and never had trouble with anybody. A Republican in politics, he was a loyal and devoted member of the Springhill United Presbyterian church. On October 10, 1888, the late John H. Logan had been married to Jennie Carson, who was born on September 26, 1865, in Tipton county, Indiana, and Avho is the daughter of John and Helen (Picken) Carson, natives of Brown county, Ohio, and Scotland, respectively. The former was the son of Irish parents, and died in Tipton county in 1884. His wife died later in Indianapolis. i\Ir. and Mrs. John H. Logan had four children. Of these children, Harry Carson, born on June 22, 1890, was educated in the Clarksburg high school, and after leaving high school, spent two years in a military school in Tennessee; Ruth, December 11, 1891, is a student at the Bradley Insti- tute at Peoria, Illinois, having taught school for two years ; Jessie, Decem- ber 22. 1893, was a student in the Bradley Institute until her graduation in 191 5, and William, April 2, 1902, is attending the Clarksburg school. At the death of her beloved husband, Mrs. John H. Logan was left well i)rovided for, and out of their combined earnings and savings she may enjny all the comforts of life, and the conveniences which her beloved hus- band meant her to have. His memory is revered not only by the widow and children he left here, but by the host of friends he gained during a long and active life in this county. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 767 WALTER T. BOLING. Among the enterprising business men of St. Paul, Decatur county, Indiana, may be mentioned Walter T. Boling, the proprietor of a feed and grain business at that place. Born in 1887, in Franklin county, Indiana, he is the son of William and Hannah ( Humphrey) Boling, the former of whom was born in 1828 and died in 1899. Hannah Humphrey was the second wife of William Boling, "the first wife having been a Miss Sloan, who bore him one child, Josephine, now deceased. By his second marriage there were twelve children, of whom Alice, the eldest and Jasper, the fifth born, are deceased. JNIrs. Alice Wheeler died in February, 1914, at her home in Laurel. The living children are, Mrs. Martha Jane Carr, of Frankfort; Mary, who is the housekeeper for George. Logan, of Clay town- ship; Albert, who is the treasurer of Decatur county; Mrs. Ada Wright, the wife of Wilbur Wright, of Adams; George W., who is engaged in the hardware business in St. Paul; W. T., the subject of this sketch; Clyde, Elmer, Owen and Edna, all of whom reside in Indianapolis. Walter T. Boling, after spending his boyhood days on the farm, and receiving his education in the common schools of the county, left home at the age of seventeen and afterward worked on a farm in Decatur county until 1 90 1, when he came to St. Paul and was employed in the grain ele- vator of William Nading, for whom he worked for six years. At the end of this period, he purchased an interest in the St. Paul Hardware Com- pany, where he remained for three years. Later he sold out and purchased his present business in which he has been engaged ever since. Mr. Boling handles and sells many thousands of bushels of corn each year as well as all kinds of feed and flour. He has been successful in business and now owns the mill and building. At the present time he is building a strictly modern up-to-date home in St. Paul and is spending in the neighborhood of two thousand dollars in its construction. In October, 1904, Mr. Boling was married to Gertrude M. Wynkoop, of Sand Creek township, the daughter of Isaac Newton and Mary Eliza- beth (McGee) Wynkoop, the former of whom was born on February 24, 1850, in Franklin county, Indiana, the son of James and Barbara ( Mer- rick) Wynkoop, and the latter jjorn on April 8, 1854, in Sand Creek town- ship, two and one-half miles from her present home, the daughter of Ralph and Sarah (Jones) McGee, the former of whom was born on January 8. 1827, and the latter born on April 12, 1832. Ralph McGee died on June 20, 1909, and his wife on February 3, 1906. Ralph McGee was the son 768 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. of John McGee, a native of Ireland, who came to Butler county, Ohio, in 1810, and who was a soldier in the War of 1812. He married Jane Cas- sell. Mrs. Boling's paternal grandparents, James and Barbara ( Herrick) Wynkoop, were natives of Penns\lvania, the former having been born on July ly, 181 7, died on February 2'], 1893, and the latter born on January 23, 1S17, died on November 30, 1903. Having started in life with five cents in money, it cannot be denied that Mr. Boling has made a wonderful success in his business. He has suc- ceeded by dint of great nerve and a philosoph}- all his own. He is a well- known citizen in the county and is highly respected wherever known. He is a stanch Democrat and for many years served as precinct com- mitteeman. Fraternally, he is a member of the Knights of Pythias Lodge No. 148, at Greenslnirg, and has been a member since he was twent^•-one years old. Mrs. Boling is a member of the Baptist church, while Mr. Bol- ing is a member of the Presbyterian church. JOHN E. OSBORN. The legal profession has claimed many of the brighest minds of Decatur county and from the beginning of the county's history in 1822 the bar of the county has included men of high standing. From the bar of this county men have gone out to become congressmen, members of the highest courts of the state and lieutenant-governors. In whatever position they have found themselves they have acquitted themselves with credit. One of the younger members of the Decatur county bar is John E. Osborn, the senior member of the firm of Osborn & Hamilton. Without those advantages which so many of the younger lawyers of today have, he has arisen to a high place in his community through the sheer force of his personality and enjoys the utriiost confidence of both bench and bar in this sectron of the state. The Osborn family is of English ancestry and were early settlers in the state of New Jersey. It was in that state that Albert I. Osborn, the father of John E., was born on February 3, 1831. Albert I. Osborn was only four years of age when he came with his father, John Osborn, to Dearborn county, Indiana, later locating in Decatur county. In this county he grew to manhood, married, reared his family, and is still living. He is now in his eighty-fifth year and makes his home at Newpoint. John E. Osljorn, the youngest child of his parents, was born on August DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 769 25, 1872, near Newpoint, Decatur county, Indiana. Reared on the farm and educated in the pubHc schools at Newpoint, Rossburg and Mechanicsburg, lie reached man's estate without any other than a solid common-school edu- cation. He remained on the farm until he was nineteen years of age, and desiring to become something else than a farmer, he began the study of law by himself. So rapidly did he master the rudiments of the legal profession that he was admitted to the bar in May, 1897. However, he had previously been appointed deputy county auditor, receiving the appointment at the age of nineteen, and had served as deputy auditor under his brother-in-law, John J. Puttman, from December 7, 1891, to March, 1896. The professional career of Mr. Osborn was begun in partnership with Elmer E. Roland, but six months later he resigned from the firm to become the partner of Hugh Wickens, the present circuit judge. After the election of Mr. Wickens as judge of the ninth judicial circuit, Mr. Osborn was in partnership with Lewis A. Harding, the firm being known as Osborn & Harding from November, 1910, to January i, 1912. On the latter date Frank Hamilton became a member of the firm, which was then changed to the firm of Osborn, Hamilton & Harding. This partnership continued until November, 1912, when Mr. Harding was elected prosecutor of this judicial district and withdrew from the firm. Since that time Mr. Osborn has been associated with Mr. Hamilton. John E. Osborn has now been practicing before the bar of this county for nearly twenty years and has had many important cases in the county, district and state courts. His practice has constantly increased and he has had the management of many interesting cases. So successful has he been that in his several firm changes he has been able to take with him the personal business which he had acquired as a member of these respective firms. The career of Mr. Osborn has not altogether been confined to his legal business. He has branched out in industrial and commercial enterprises with the same degree of success which has marked his progress in his chosen field of law. He is a stockholder and a director of the American Cooperage Company of Helena, Arkansas; the Columbia Cooperage Company of Mc- Gehee, Arkansas; the Arkansas Cooperage Company of Jennie, Arkansas, and is a partner with John T. Meek in a plantation in Concordia Parish, Louisiana, near Natchez. He and Mr. Meek own forty-four hundred acres of land on which they raise rice, cotton and considerable live stock. They ^Iso have a saw-mill on the plantation. On July 17, 1900, John E. Osborn was married to Grace Gullefer, the (49) 770 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. daughter of Dr. Thomas B. and Louise (Hederick) Gullefer, to wliich uniou one son has been born, Wendell G., born on October 23, 1905. Mrs. Osborn's father, Dr. T. B. Gullefer, was born eight miles from Indianapolis, Indiana, on March 12, 1851, a son of Stephen Gullefer, also a native of Marion county, Indiana, who died on his farm in that county in 1901. Stephen Gullefer was a son of Aaron Gullefer, a nati\e uf Wayne county, Indiana, an early settler of Clarion county, where he acquired a farm of six hundred and forty acres. The wife of Stephen Gullefer was Emily Bowers, born in Salem, Indiana, in 1824, who died in July, 1853. Dr. T. B. Gullefer is the only child born to this union now living. After the death of his first wife Stephen Gullefer married a second time and had six children by his second marriage, three of whom are dead, those living being John N., who owns the home farm; Eliza A., who resides with her brother John, and Judson. a resident of Indianapolis. After receiving a common-school education in the schools of Marion county. Doctor Gullefer spent one year in Butler College and then became a student of DePauw L^niversity for three years. After leaving college he taught school in the rural districts for six years. In 1879 he entered the medical college at Indianapolis and was graduated with the class of 1881, later taking a post-graduate course in the Chicago Homeopathic College, from which he was graduated in 1891. Doctor Gullefer practiced in Plain- field, Indiana, for five years ; in North Vernon, Indiana, for two years, and has been in continuous practice in Greensburg, this county, for the past twenty-five years. Dr. Thomas B. Gullefer was married in 1873 to Louise Hedrick, who was born in Gallatin county, Kentucky, in 1851, daughter of John and Charlotte Hedrick, to which union two children were born, Grace and Bessie. Grace is the wife of Mr. Osborn and Bessie married John Hor- nung, Jr., a grain merchant of Greensburg. Mrs. Gullifer passed away on July 5. 1915. Doctor Gullefer is a Republican in politics and has served as coroner of Decatur county, for eleven years; six years as secretary of the county board of health, and four years as secretary of the city board of health. He also servetl as United States pension examiner for one year, and is the present medical examiner for the government civil service in the fourth con- gressional district. He is a member of the Indiana Institute of Homeopathy. John E. Osborn made his first start in Democratic politics immediately after reaching his majority and has taken a keen interest in political affairs ever since. As member of the Democratic state central committee from the DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. .77I sixth congressional district from January, 1908, to January, 1912, liis wise and judicious management of Democratic affairs was largely responsible for the election of many Democrats to office. When Finley Gray was elected to Congress in 1912, he was the first Democrat to go to Congress from this district for twenty-five years. Mr. Osborn deserves no little share of the credit for bringing about the election of this Democratic congressman. Mrs. Osborn is an active member of the Christian church of Greens- burg. Mr. and Mrs. Osborn are prominent in the various activities of the community which go toward making it a better and happier place in which to live. Their influence is always cast in behalf of all humanitarian and benevolent projects and in this way tlrey have earned the commendation of all those with whom they come into contact. GEORGE W. BOLING. During a period of nearly a century, various members of the Boling family have been prominent in the agricultural, industrial, commercial and political life of Decatur and adjoining counties. The family was founded in this section of Indiana by Benjamin Boling, an interesting pioneer citi- zen of this region. William Boling, the father of George W., and the son of Benjamin Boling, owned a farm just over the line from Decatur county in Franklin county, and spent all of his life on this farm. It is now owned by Albert Boling, a brother of George W., and the present county treasurer. George W. Boling, wdio is best known in Decatur county for his inter- est in the St. Paul Hardware Company, of St. Paul, Indiana, was born on September 14, 1S73, in Franklin county, Indiana. His parents were Will- iam and Hannah (Flumphrey) Boling, the former of whom was born in 1828 and who died in October, 1899. Hannah Humphrey was the second wife' of William Boling and now lives in .\dams in this countv. His first wife was a Miss Sloan, who bore her husliand one child, Josephine, now deceased. By the second marriage there were twelve children, of whom two, Mrs. Alice Wheeler, the eldest, and Jasper, the fifth born, are deceased, the former dying in February, 1914, at her home in Laurel, Indiana. The living children are, Mrs. Martha Jane Carr, who lives at Frankfort; Mary, who makes her home with George Logan in Clay township, and is his housekeeper; All)ert, who is the present treasurer of Decatur county; Mrs. Ada Wright, who is the wife of Wilbur Wright, of Adams, Indiana; George 772 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. W., who is the subject of this sketch; Waher T., who is in the feed and grain business and operates a mill at St. Paul; Clyde; Elmer; Owen, and Edna, all of whom are in Indianapolis. Although a member of a large family, George W. Boling was not denied the very best educational advantages and, after completing the com- mon school course of Decatur county, was a student at the Danville Normal school and the Indianapolis Business University. He was employed by various firms in Indianapolis after graduating from the business college, particularly the William B. Burford Printing Company, the Erie Railroad and the American Express Company. In 1901 he came to St. Paul, Indiana, and for two years operated the William Nading elevator. In 1903 Mr. Boling entered the hardware business under the firm name of Leffler & Boling at St. Paul. This arrangement continued until in October, 1903, Avhen the firm became Mobley & Boling. This firm continued until 1905, when Elmer Upjohn purchased Mr. Mobley's interest when the St. Paul Hardware Company was organized. In 1908 C. F. Thompson purchased the interest of Mr. Upjohn and he is now a member of the firm. The company has a storeroom, thirty by eighty feet, and a wareroom adjacent in a brick block. They also have a garage in the Red Men's building, forty by forty feet, which is used as a storage room for automobiles. The com- pany handles general hardware, agricultural implements, the Johnson line of implements, Oliver plows and other standard lines, cream separators, Fehring buggies, manufactured at Columbus, Indiana, standard makes of wagons, guns and ammunition, stoves, kerosene and gasoline. The com- pany is also the local agent for the Studebaker Automobile Company, and the agent in Shelby, Rush and Decatur counties for the Hercules car. Inci- dentally, they handle automobile supplies and automobile tires. They sell gas and gasoline engines, washing machines, install furnaces, water sys- tems and plumbing. The company is well equipped to fit up a residence in a most modern way, so far as heating and water systems are concerned. George W. Boling is connected with the St. Paul Building and Loan Association in the capacity of secretary. Tliis company has its offices in Mr. Boling's store and was organized in 1886. It has done more to build up St. Paul than any other concern in the township, particularly in enabling laborers and quarrymen to erect homes in this community. In May, 1901, George W. Boling was married to Nona B. Burner, the daughter of William Burner of Greensburg. To this union has been bom three children, Mildred Louise, Vivian Avalon and Clara Virginia. Mr. and ]\Irs. Boling and family are members of the Methodist Epis- DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. -j-jt^ C(;pal church. Fraternally, Islv. Boling is a member of the Free and Accepted Masons, the Knights of Pythias and the Independent Order of Odd Fellows. He is identified with the Republican party, but has never held office. JAMES N. BUSH. James N. Bush, a veteran of the Civil War and formerly a stone quarry superintendent and bridge builder of Adams township, was born in 1842 in Owen county, Kentucky, and is the son of Pleasant and Drusilla (Smoot) Bush, both of whom were natives of Kentucky. Their parents came from \'irginia to Kentucky. The Smoot family came originally came from Scotland. Pleasant Bush was the son of Joseph and the Bush family came orig- inally from England, and Joseph Bush's wife, who before her marriage was a Miss Duncan, was of German extraction. Pleasant Bush, himself, was bom, lived and died in Kentucky. In 1869 James N. Bush came to Decatur county with his wife, to whom he had been married in 1866, in Kentucky. They had one child at the time. Catherine (Smoot) Bush, the wife of James N., was born in Kentucky and was the daughter of George Smoot, a native of that state. Born in 1842, she died in Decatur county in 1908. They had a family of six children, three of whom are still living at St. Paul, William, who is a blacksmith; A. M., who is a restaurant keeper, and C. L., who is a partner with A. M. They have erected many fine buildings in this part of the county, including a fine concrete business building in St. Paul. When Mr. Bush came to Decatur county he began cutting stone. He followed this trade for about a year, when he was employed by W. W. Lowe, for whom he worked for twenty-one years as superintendent of stone quarries. He afterward leased and operated for himself a stone quarry and, in the meantime, was engaged in bridge building. In 1863 Mr. Bush enlisted in Company E, Thirtieth Regiment, Ken- tucky Volunteer Infantry, which was mounted and commanded by Colonel -Mexandria. This regiment was attached to the army of General Stone- man. Mr. Bush saw hard service and was detailed to scout work mostly, his regiment ha\'ing operated chiefly in Kentucky, Tennessee and Virginia. He served until the close of the war, being mustered out of service on April 18, 1865. On one occasion his division engaged the army of General 774 ■ DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Breckenridge at Saltville and was badly defeated; in fact, almost anni- hilated. However, they returned to Saltville with four thousand men and there engaged General Breckenridge and defeated him. Saltville was an important point, since it was the source of salt for the Confederate army. The Union army destroyed the salt works and the available supply of salt. Mr. Bush had many thrilling escapades in scout duties. He was possessed of wonderful zest and courage which served him well on many occasions. He was a brave and resourceful soldier and is today very proud of his military record, which he has every right to be. For many years James N. Bush has been badly afflicted with rheuma- tism, but nevertheless is a man of cheerful disposition. In his life he has made considerable money and had a comfortable competence laid by to last him the remainder of his life. On account of sickness and death in his family his fortune is somewhat depleted. After the death of his wife he divided his property among his children and went to live with his son. a business man of St. Paul. Mr. Bush is a man of strong convictions, which have always been a good guide for his actions. Reared in one of the strongest rebel counties of Kentucky, where all of his neighbors and practically all of his relatives joined the Confederate army, Mr. Bush himself believed in the cause of the Union and chose to support the stars and stripes. He believed that slavery was wrong and human freedom was right, and cast his lot accord- ingly. No citizen is more highly respected in Decatur county than the \en- erable James N. Bush. JOHN R. KANOUSE. The late John R. Kanouse was a well-known merchant and farmer of St. Paul, Adams township, Decatur county, Indiana. He was a man of large mental mold and of prodigious physical energy, one who by careful application to his personal business built up a large patronage in this com- munity and who held, at the time of his death, the respect and confidence of the host of friends he had made during his life. The late John R. Kanouse was born in 1844 in Clay township, Decatur county, Indiana, the son of George and Isabelle (Sumpter) Kanouse, the latter of whom was the daughter of John and Elizabeth Sumpter, natives of Iowa, and relatives of General Sumpter of Civil War fame. George Kanouse himself was a soldier in the Civil War. In 1S71 John R. Kanouse was DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. ' 775 married to Courtney McCoy, a daughter of Isaiah and Mary (Short) McCoy, the former of whom was a native of Virginia, born in 1815, and who died in 1909. After coming to Decatur county with his parents, WiUiam and Nancy (Waple) McCoy, when seven years of age, he settled with them on a farm in Adams township. Wilham McCoy was a miller on Cliffy creek and a soldier in the War of 1812. He died in Kentucky. IsaiaH McCoy was a Decatur county farmer and a very successful business man, who started, in life with nothing and who by his shrewdness, industry and good management accumulated considerable property. He owned several hundred acres of land at the time of his death. A Republican in politics, he was a man of strong convictions as well as of good moral character. He died in 1909, leaving a family of seven children. John, Benjamin and Mrs. Nancy Lawhead are deceased; Mrs. Eliza Garrett is the wife of Lewis Garrett, of Adams township; Mrs. Julia Bright is the wife of John Bright, of Adams township; Courtney married Mr. Kanouse, and Mrs. Arminda Boicourt is the wife of George Boicourt, who lives near Letts in Sand Creek township. Mrs. Courtney Kanouse was born in 1850 in Adams township and educated in the common schools of Decatur county. She grew to woman- hood at home and there lived until her marriage in 1871. She is a woman of keen business judgment, well able to care successfully for the business with which she was left at the time of her husband's death. She is a mem- ber of the Christian church at St. Paul, of the Order of the Eastern Star and the Rebekahs. After their marriage in 1871, Mr. and Mrs. John R. Kanouse started in life at St. Onier in Decatur county, where he was engaged in the mer- cantile business. He was very successful there, but after two years, in 1880, he and his wife removed to St. Paul, where he engaged in the mer- cantile business and in which he continued until two years before his death. An unusually successful business man, the late John R. Kanouse owned, at the time of his death, not only the large store in St. Paul, but three hun- dred acres of land as well. Mr. and Mrs. John R. Kanouse had eight children, seven of whom are now living, as follow: Roy K. is a merchant in Greensburg; Mrs. Daisy Bewley lives in California; George is in the automobile business in Indian- apolis; Mrs. Rose Hill, wife of Oscar Jay, prosecuting attorney of Elkhart, Indiana; Mrs. Nelhe Hill is the wife of James Hill, of Westport; Mrs. Edna Wolf is the wife of Carl ^\''o!f, of St. Paul; Frank lives at home. No duty, public or pri\ate, was neglected by the late John R. Kanouse. 776 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. A man of deep religious convictions, he was a member of the Methodist Episcopal church. Fraternally, he was identified with the Masonic frater- nity and the Knights of Pythias. He was also a Red ]\Ian. His acquaint- ances and friends were not confined to Decatur count}'. He had a host of friends in Shelb}' county as well. His beloved widow is a woman of refine- ment and of splendid Christian character. She has a beautiful home in St. Paul, where, with her son and his wife, she is living. JOHN T. PAVY. No family in the western part of Decatur county has exerted a more widely marked influence for good throughout that section than has the Pavy family, which has been active in the good works of the Milford and the Burney neighborhoods for the past four or five generations and is one of the most substantial and well-established families in this part of the state. The late John T. Pavy, whose death at his home in Burney on March 21, 1914, was widely mourned throughout the section of the county in which he so long had been one of the leaders in the religious and social life thereabout, was an able, upright and influential citizen; a man who created a distinct impress upon the life of his time in the com- munity in which for years he had gone about doing good, and it is but fitting and proper that in a history of the county covering the period of his activities here, there should be presented a modest sketch of his useful career, together with some of the salient points relating to his interesting family. Though a quiet, unassuming man, John T. Pavy ever was fore- most in the good works of his neighborhood and none therein was held m higher esteem and respect than he. Generous and kind-hearted, he ever was willing to lend a helping hand and many there are in the part of the county to which his labors were devoted who have cause to cherish his memon' with feelings of gratitude and warmest admiration. A devout Christian, he imparted to all his relations with his fellow men a spirit of sincerity that left no doubt regarding the noble and disinterested motives that animated his course of action. In his daily walk and conversation, John T. Pavy was frank and direct, open and aboveboard ; and all men knew where he stood on questions affecting the general welfare. Being one of the most substantial farmers in the western part of Decatur county, he very naturally and by proper right took his place among the leaders of DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 'J'J-J thought and sentiment thereabout and his judgment on local issues or on questions of right and policy exerted a fine and enduring influence upon the neighborhood. He and his wife were members of the Baptist church and their children were reared in that faith, the family being among the most active workers in the various beneficences of the church. He was an ardent Republican, though not of the ofiice-seeking class, and his sound judgment and keen knowledge of affairs gave to his political opinions no light weight with the managers of the party in this county. He was an ideal husband and father, his in\'ariable and unswerving devotion to his family having been beautiful to see, and his death created a vacancy in the family circle which time does not fill, his widow and children being devoted to his memory, cherishing the same as a priceless legacy, for he left a stainless name'; the record of a blameless life, than which there can be no more fitting phrase used in eulogy. John T. Pavy was born on a farm in Clay township, Decatur county, Indiana, a short distance west of the village of Burney, in the year 1848, a son of J. J. and Nancy (Deem) Pavy, both members of pioneer families in this county, further details of the genealogy of this family being pre- sented elsewhere in this volume, these families having been prominent and influential in the days of the county's early settlement. Reared on the home farm, receiving the most careful training in the rudiments of agri- culture, a vocation to which he was destined to devote his life, John T. Pavy attended Hartsville College for a time and completed his education at Franklin College. He entered upon his life as a farmer with charac- teristic energy, giving to the details of the farm a studious attention which was productive of results and he became cjuite successful, leaving a valuable estate at the time of his death. On March 28, 1878, at Milford, Decatur county, Indiana, John T. Pavy was united in marriage to Anna Jackson, who was born on a farm in Clay township, this county, daughter of William T. and Margaret (Miers) Jackson, the former of whom was the son of William D. and Amelia (Hill- man) Jackson, who settled in this county in 1840. William D. Jackson was a Virginian and his wife was a native of Maryland. Shortly after their marriage they located in Cincinnati, where William D. Jackson became a prosperous real estate dealer. In 1840 they came to Decatur county, set- tling on a quarter-section of land in Fugit township, removing thence, in 1847, to Clay township, where they lived until 1853, in which year they moved to a farm two and one-half miles west of the town of Greensburg, where they spent the rest of their lives. An interesting story of the life 7/8 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. ■of this pioneer family is presented elsewhere in this volume in the bio- graphical sketch relating to William E. Jackson, a brother of Mrs. Pavy. William T. Jackson was about eighteen years of age when his parents moved from Cincinnati to this county. He married Margaret Miers, daugh- ter of Thomas Miers, one of the most substantial of the pioneer farmers of Decatur county, and to this union were born eight children, namely : Anna, the widow of Mr. Pavy; James, deceased; Edwin, a well-known farmer of Clay township, this county; Benjamin J., deceased; Adelaide, who married Henry Barnes; William E., a prominent farmer of Washington township, this count}', who married Alta Moore; Charles J., who died in infancy, anci Harry, who lives in Colorado. William T. Jackson died at the age of sixty years and his wife died at the age of sixty-eight. Anna (Jackson) Pavy was born in a log cabin on what is now known as the Miers farm in Clay township, then owned by her father, previously by her grandfather. She was educated in the schools at Milford, this county, and at the old academy at Danville, Indiana, her father having been for a time engaged in the dry goods business at Dan\ille. Upon her marriage, in 1878, to Mr. Pavy she entered seriously upon the life of farming and was an earnest and devoted helpmeet of her husband. When she was married she was a member of the Methodist church, but changed her church affiliation to the Baptist in order to conform her faith to that of her hus- band, he having been reared in the Baptist faith, and for years they were among the most active and influential members of the congregation to which they were attached. A woman of broad mind and sterling character, Mrs. Pavy has always been an influence for good in the Burney neighljorhood and her home in the pleasant village of Burney is a center from which radiate only the blandest and most salutary promptings. To John T. and Anna (Jackson) Pavy were born two children, a son and a daughter, Harry, who was born in 1882, is operating a part of the home farm, and Lena, who married Ewing Arnold, lives on the William F. Smiley farm, one and one-half miles south of Greensburg. Beside his wife and children, John T. Pavy left several brothers and sisters to mourn his death, to his parents having been born the following children : Susan, who lives on the old Pavy farm south of Burney ; Elizabeth ; Dorcas, whn married Felix Gartin, a prominent live stock dealer of this county, died hi 1915; Matilda, who lives on the home farm; John T.. deceased, the subject of this sketch; James, a farmer of the Forest Hill neighlrarhood; Rev. William A., pastor of the Baptist church at \\'aldron ; Nannie, who DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 779 married Daniel Harker; Mary J., who married John Templeton, and Mi- ner\a, wlio was born blind and who is li\'ing at the old home. Minerva Pavy was educated in the Indiana school for the blind at Indianapolis and became a proficient musician, being not only a fine singer, but an accom- plished pianist, having supplemented her course in the state school by a finishing course in the Indianapolis Conservatory of Music. She is a woman of much charm and grace of manner and of a highly cultivated mind. Despite the afliiction which has shut her out from a sight of all the beauties and the wonders of the world, she is possessed of a charmingly cheerful disposition and is a great favorite with her many friends. OTTO F. DIETRICH. Among the prosperous and well-established enterprises of Burney, Clay township, Decatur county, Indiana, is the saw-mill, owned and operated 1)y Otto F. Dietrich, which was established in 1902 with an invested capital of three thousand dollars. This mill has a capacity of eight thousand feet ■daily and Mr. Dietrich, while he does some commercial custom work, is largely engaged in cutting and sawing his own timber. He buys timljer in large tracts, has the logs cut and saws them in his own mill. He employs the minimum of six hands and sometimes as many as twenty. The mill consists of the very latest ecjuipment. Otto F. Dietrich was born on April 8. 1876, in Germany, and is the son of Ferdinand and Marie (Weber) Dietrich. On May 9, 1888, Otto F. Dietrich, at the age of twelve years, arrived in America with an aunt, Pauline Dietrich. For some time he resided with an uncle, Charles Dietrich, in Tipton county. Although he had received a liberal education in Ger- many, he attended school for four years after coming to America and mastered the English language. For five years he worked as a farm hand in Tipton county, Indiana. In 1893 his parents and brothers and sisters came to Bartholomew county, Indiana, and began farming one and one- half miles west of St. Louis. They purchased a farm near Hartsville and there the father died in 1895. • After his death, the mot\jer and sisters moved to Cincinnati, where the mother purchased a home. ]\Ir. Dietrich, however, remained in this state and engaged in farming and in saw-mill business. He took charge of the old mill at Burney and in 1905 tore out all of the old machinery and installed new. Mr. Dietrich 780 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. rents land extensi\ely on which he raises crops to feed the horses which he uses in the mill and for hauling logs to the mill. On October 8, 1902, Mr. Dietrich was married to Lillie Aton, who was born on a farm, one and one-half miles southwest of Hope in Bar- tholomew county. They have had two children, Frank, who died at the age of nine years in the fall of 191 3 of diphtheria, and Paul, who is now six years old. Air. Dietrich is a Democrat and he and his wife are members of the Lutheran church. Fraternally, he is a member of the Loyal Order of Moose. Formerly, he was a member of the Knights of Pythias. ANTHONY B. MULROY. Anthony B. Mulroy, a substantial citizen and business man of Decatur county, Indiana, and a resident of St. Paul, was born in 1859, in this town, the son of Richard and Bridget (Barrett) Mulroy, the former of whom was a native of County Mayo, Ireland, born in 1825. On the day that Richard Mulroy was twenty-two years old, he took passage on a sailing boat, "Star of the North," for America, landing in New York city after an eventful voyage in 1847. When the ship on which he came to America was three days out of port, a terrific storm was encount- ered and the experiences of all on board was something to be remembered during their entire lives. For three days the ship was completely lost, and at times those on board almost gave up hope of ever seeing land. However, the "Star of the North" was a good, seafaring boat and successfully with- stood the severe storm. When Richard Alulroy landed in New York city, he was withuut funds or friends. Starting out in life in the new world, he obtained employment on a farm in New York state, and after working a year there removed to Pennsylvania, where he remained for three years. He made three unsuccessful attempts to enlist as a soldier in the Mexican War. After three years in Pennsyhania, Richard Mulroy left Pittsburgh and caiue to Lawrenceburg, Indiana, by boat. From Lawrenceburg he walked to Indianapolis where he remained for four or five years, during which time he was engaged in railroad construction work, making Indianapolis his headquarters. In 1857 Richard Mulroy was married to Bridgett Barrett, who was DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 78 1 born in 1823 in Ireland in County Mayo within forty miles of the birth- place of her future husband. Born on the west coast of Ireland, she came alone to America in 1856, and after landing in this country came direct to Greensburg, Decatur county, Indiana, where she had a sister living, Mrs. John Riley, with whom she made her home until her marriage in 1858. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Mulroy came to St. Paul in 1858, where her husljand lived until her death in 1906. He died on June 2, 191 5, at the age of ninety years. During his entire active life he had been engaged in rail- road construction work and in stone quarries. He had been retired only live years. In fact, in 1914, at the age of eighty-nine, he planted and culti- \'ated a large garden. He was a stanch Democrat in politics, and a member of the Catholic church, as was his good wife also. They had four children, Anthony B., the subject of this sketch, of St. Paul; Edward, of St. Paul; Anna, who lives at home, and Margaret, who died in infancy. Anthony B. Mulroy, who was born in St. Paul one year after his par- ents removed to this town, was educated in the common schools and when he was thirty-two years old, engaged in stone quarry work. At this time he was married to Henrietta Avey, the daughter of Daniel Wilson and Melissa (Pence) Avey, natives of Shelby county, Indiana, and old, well- established and highly respected citizens of this section. xA.s late as 1914 Anthony B. Mulroy was engaged in railroad construc- tion and stone quarry work. In October of 19 14 he purchased the grocery and mercantile business of William Kelso, of St. Paul, and is today engaged in business for himself. He handles a complete line of dry goods and gen- eral merchandise. Within a comparative!}'' short time he has built up a large trade in this community. Mr. Mulroy is a popular citizen and one with whom the people of this community naturally like to trade. He has been honorable and upright in all his relations with the pulilic, and upon this basis his business has grown since he took possession. Mr. and Mrs. Mulroy have had one son, John A. Mulroy, who was born on January i, 1899. He was born on Sunday morning, the first day of the week and the first day of the year. Luck seems to have lieen with him, as he has never been sick a day since his birth. He is a young man of rare promise and is popular in this community. Having graduated from the common schools in 1914, he is now a student in the freshman year at the high school at St. Paul. In a beautiful residence of St. Paul, Mr. and Mrs. IMulroy have their home. Formally speaking, Mr. ?iIulroy is a Democrat, but he is not quite so stanch a Democrat as was his father in his earlier years. ]\Ir. 2^Iulroy 782 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. places the welfare of his country above the success of his party. He is a progressive citizen of the substantial and solid type and has a host of friends in this community. All his life has been spent in St. Paul. As a conse- quence of his industry and good management he has accumulated a sub- stantial competence and now owns considerable property in this section. JAMES B. DAMS. An enterprising and successful farmer of Decatur county, Indiana, who lives three miles southeast of Burney, now living retired, and who has succeeded in life as a consequence of his own persistent industry and good management, is James B. Davis, a man who believes strongly in principles of right and justice, and who during his long life in this county, ha^s been regarded as one of its very best citizens. James B. Davis, who was born in 1848, in Union county, Indiana, is the son of Isaac and IMartha (Barr) Davis, the former of whom was born in Butler county, Ohio, in 1803, the son of James Davis, Sr., who married Mary Taylor. They were natives of New Jersey. Alary Taylor was of Scotch-Irish origin, and James Davis was of German parentage. They were among the earliest settlers in Union county, Indiana, and lived the greater part of their lives in that county. They were very prosperous farmers, and at the time of his death, he owned approximately one thousand acres of land. They had eight children, of whom Isaac Davis, the father of James B., was the seventh child. He was born in Butler county, Ohio, and about 1803, when Isaac was born, the famil}- removed to Union county, and there entered land, where they spent the remainder of their lives. Isaac Davis was a successful farmer and owned several hundred acres of good land at the time of his death. Until 1856, when the Republican party was organ- ized, he was a Whig, and he affiliated with the party of Lincoln, and remained loyal to it all the rest of his days. He was more of a patriot than a partisan and always had at heart the best interests of his country. Isaac and Martha (Barr) Davis had eight children, of whom James B. is the fifth child. The father died in 1S58. James B. Davis lived at home and worked on the farm until he was twenty-two years? of age, when he removed to Decatur county, Indiana, and purchased a farm in Jackson township. In 1873 Mr. Davis was married to Martha C. Ewing, who was the daughter of Patrick and Lydia (Morgan) Ewing. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 78^ The Ewing family is one of the oldest and most prominent in Decatur county, and is descended from one Patrick E. Ewing, who emigrated to America from Ireland some time during the War of the Revolution. On the voyage a son was born, and on account of kindness shown to him by General Putnam, he was named for the general and to this day the name has been kept in the family. On Patrick's arrival in America, he settled in Maryland, near the Susquehanna river, some forty miles from Baltimore, where he died. His family consisted of four sons, Samuel, Joshua,. Nathaniel and Putnam. The first three settled in Virginia, where they became prominent citizens. Their descendants have since migrated to Ten- nessee and Missouri, and have attained considerable prominence in different states. Putnam Ewing remained in Maryland until some time after his marriage to Miss Jennie McClelland, the daughter of Doctor McClelland, of that state, and then came to Bourbon county. Kentucky, in iSo6. Subse- quently, he settled in Bath county and there lived and died. He had ten children, namely : Robert, Patrick, Joshua, Polly, Samuel, Jennie, James, Eliza, George McClelland and Andrew Jackson. It was the Patrick Ewing of this family who was the father of Mrs. James B. Da\is. He was born in Cecil county, Maryland, in 1803, and was three years old when brought by his father to Kentucky. He remained on the farm in Kentucky until after his marriage to Lydia Morgan, of Montgomery county, Kentucky. He was a member of the state militia of Kentucky and was married in September, 1826, to Miss Morgan. About 1827 he came witli his wife and infant daughter to Decatur county. He was a hardy son of illustrious ancestors and was a man of exceptional native ability. He accumulated a large tract of land in this county. Mrs. James P.. Davis is a woman of rare intelligence and one whose conversation sparkles with wit and humor. She had only the meager advantages of the pioneer public schools as far as an education is concerned, Init she is a woman of great native ability, and one does not have to listen to her conversation long before discovering this wonderful native ability. Her children can be justly proud to have for their mother a woman of her intelligence. After the marriage of Mr. and Airs. Davis, they lived in Jackson town- ship on a farm until 1883, when they sold out and inuxhased the farm they now live upon, three miles southeast of Burney. In the early years of their married life they had the usual experiences of the pioneer citizens. They lived in a log cabin for the most part, and both remember keenly the hardships- of this early life. -784 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Mr. and Mrs. Davis ha\e had tliree children, George -was born in 1874, and is a farmer in Decatur county; William, in 1875, and is engaged in farming with his brother, George, and Delia is the wife of Samuel Hanks, who li\'es three miles northwest of Burney and who is a prosperous farmer. Delia has one child, Mary C. Hanks. George and Will Davis lived on the farm at home until George was twenty-eight years old, when he decided to begin life for himself. At that time the parents gave to the sons, George and Will, a farm of one hundred and twenty acres with an incumbrance of some two or three thousand dollars. This was no small load, even for mature shoulders, but by industry and shrewd management they cleared the farm of indebtedness in sixteen months' time. They have prospered pro- portionately ever since, and are now large dealers in live stock. Their home is called "Bachelors' Hall." James B. Davis had always been identified with the Republican party until 1912, when the new Progressive party was formed, with which he affiliated. He is a man who is little impressed by political parties or party emblems, but believes it is his duty, as a citizen, to support superior men and superior measures, rather than to cast his vote blindly without regard to platforms or principles, or the moral standing of the party's candidate. The sons are like their father in this respect. They are well respected in this community and fa\'orably known. Mr. and ]\Irs. Davis have lived honorable and upright lives and have set a worthy example for their children and for their friends in this com- munity. No word of suspicion has ever attached to the character of James B. Davis. He is a manly man and a true Christian gentleman. GEORGE S. CRAWFORD, M. D. In the historical and biographical annals of any section, a review of the lives of leading physicians is interesting not only because of the pro- fessional service which this honorable body of men perform, but because, as a general rule, physicians attain the rank of leadership in public move- ments and public enterprises. This may be true because, aside from their professional education, their standard of intelligence and their breadth of information and sympathy are such as to uphold ideals which the various members of the community emulate. No one can ever take the place of the physician in the affection of the family or in the home, neighborhood, town or s^./a^^^^i^t^i/i/^^^ CH/Q, DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 78 S •city. To some extent the physician is the arbiter between Hfe and death and upon his skill depends frequently the very endurance of human life. When the art of the good physician fails and life flows out, he, neverthe- less, remains as the comforter of loving and dear friends in times of sorrow and distress. No one can measure his influence, since it is of a most inti- mate and personal kind. Dr. George S. Crawford, a well-known physician of Milford, this county, who has practiced his profession forty-one years in this community, is the very type of man to attain a position of proud eminence in the community life. Day by day, week by week and year by year, he has gone about the homes of Clay and adjoining townships doing his duty in a professional way; but, what is far greater and grander, doing his duty as a sympathetic-minded friend and man. George S. Crawford was born, on December 23, 1832, in Lawrenceburg, Dearborn county, Indiana, the son of Rev. James and Hannah F. (Robinson) Crawford, natives of New York and Madison, Indiana, respectively. When Doctor Crawford was an infant only three days old, he was bereft of the loving tenderness and care of a fond mother by her untimely death, and he was taken in charge by Mrs. Owensby, who had just lost her baby by death, and was reared by her until he was two years of age, the Owensby's home having been in Crawfordsville, this state. Subsecjuently, Rev. James Crawford remarried, his second wife having been Kate Woodfill, a sister of James M. Woodfill, of Greenslnirg, and after his death his widow made her home with Doctor Crawford, in Milford, for twenty-five years. Rev. James Crawford was a pioneer Methodist minister, had a large circuit in this section of the state and, during his life, filled many appointments. He was a man of noble and generous impulses, whose life seemed to be devoted to the service of his fellowmen. When he was old enough George S. Crawford attended the typical Hoosicr schools and there obtained the rudiments of a liberal education, later pursuing his education in Moores Hill College. At the age of twenty- one he was graduated from the Indiana Medical College at Indianapolis, and upon his graduation, came to Decatur county, locating at Milford, where he established himself in the practice of his profession. There he has remained for forty-one years, during which time he has luiilt up one of the largest practices of any physician now living in Decatur county. Doctor Crawford was not married until rather late in life. His wife, to whom he was married on July 6, 1898, before her marriage was Frances Olive Blackmore. who was born on October 19, 1867, on a farm five miles (50) 786 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. west of Greensburg, the daughter of Lawrence O. and Frances \\'. (Wallace)- Blackmore, natives of Shelby county, Kentuck}-, and Rockbridge county, Virginia, respectively, the former being the son of Owen W. Blackmore, of Shelby county, Kentucky, who came to Decatur county, Indiana, in 1S35. Mrs. Crawford's wife's mother was the daughter of John and Jane (Quig- iey) Wallace, natives of Virginia, who moved to Decatur county in 1837 and settled in Washington township. This, was only two years after the coming of the Blackmores, who lived only a mile east of the Wallace farm. Doctor and Mrs. Crawford have had no children. They are prominent in the social life of Clay township and both are well known in Greensburg and popular there. Both are members of the Presbyterian church at Greens- burg. Dr. Crawford is a member of the Masonic fraternity, having joined this lodge at Milford many years ago. He is a member of the Decatur County Medical Society and the Indiana State Medical Association. He is a Republican and one of the most uncompromising of men as far as his political belief is concerned. He believes in the principles of the Republi- can party and believes that this party is best equipped from tradition and from its record of past usefulness to administer the affairs of this govern- ment. A man who believes this as strongly as does Doctor Crawford is naturally well settled in his political belief. He is a grand and useful figure in the community where he has lived and worked so long and enjoys the universal confidence and esteem of the people. JAMES M. SHORTRIDGE. Among the better known and older citizens of St. Paul, Indiana, is James M. Shortridge, formerly a well-known hardware merchant of this community, who is now living retired. However, he devotes considerable time to the business of W. W. Townsend, a dealer of this place, and acts as a bookkeeper for him. James M. Shortridge was born on November 6, 1849, in Johnson county, Indiana, the son of John and Ellen (Smock) Shortridge, the former of whom was born in 1822 and who died in 1899. The father was a native of Wayne county, Indiana, the son of George Shortridge, Sr., a native of Kentucky and an early settler in Wayne county. The parents of Ellen Smock were also natives of Kentucky. Her mother died in 1885 at the age of over ninety years. DECATUR COUNTY^ INDIANA. 787 The parents of James AL Shortridge moved to Greenwood and retired late in life and there died. The farm located near Greenwood, Johnson county, was purchased by James M. and his brother, George, and was farmed by the latter until his death. There were three children in the Short- ridge family, George, now deceased ; Airs. Vandelene Washard, of Green- wood, and James M., the subject of this sketch. When a lad of twenty-two years, James j\I. Shortridge became a brake- man on the Pennsylvania railroad and followed this occupation for four years. He then took up carpentering and house building in his home local- ity and also worked for the railroad as a carpenter. He was for four years employed by the Lake Erie & Western railroad as a bridge carpenter. On November 26, 1879, Mr. Shortridge was married to Allie Martin, of St. Paul, the daughter of Ralph Martin, an early settler of Decatur county. After his marriage, Mr. Shortridge engaged in the hardware busi- ness. He bought out the store owned by John Buell and remained in busi- ness for thirty years, having been very successful. In 1909 Mr. Shortridge sold out the business. He has extensive .real estate holdings in St. Paul, owning a two-story brick building on Main street, a one-story stone build- ing and residence property. He also has two lots and fifty-five acres of farm land, beside other personal investments. Mr. and Mrs. Shortridge have had four children, Elmer, who is a motorman on the Indianapolis & Cincinnati Traction line and is a machinist by trade; Mrs. Hazel Clark, of Indianapolis; Irene E., who is a teacher in the public schools and lives at home, and Helen, who also lives at home and is a student in the high school. James M. Shortridge was reared a Republican as was his father before him, but late in life the father voted the Prohibition ticket. Mr. Short- ridge voted for Horace Greeley and was a Democrat until 1896, when he refused to subscribe to the free-silver doctrine of the Democratic party and voted the Republican ticket, which he has voted ever since. Mr. and Mrs. Shortridge are members of the Christian church, in which he is a trustee. Fraternally, he is a member of the Free and Accepted Masons and is a mem- ber of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite Masons of Indianapolis and also the Murat Temple, Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, at Indianapolis. He is a member of the Baldwin commandery and the Knights Tem])lar at Shelbyville. In May, 191 5, he attended the golden jubilee of the Scottish Rite Masons at Indianapolis. In addition to these fraternal relations, Mr. Shortridge is a member of the Knights of Pythias and the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks No. 475, at Greensburg. 788 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Of Mr. and Mrs. Shortridge's children, Elmer married a Miss Hess and has one child, Priscilla. Mrs. liazel Clark also has one child, June Ellen. It will have to be admitted that the life of James M. Shortridge has been a distinct and unqualified success, that he has accomplished a reason- able measure of the things he set out to do, and that, in his declining years, he may enjoy the comforts of life without the necessity of the toil which characterized his earlier years. JOHN JOHNSON. The Union soldier during the great war between the states builded wiser than he knew. Through four years of suffering and wasting hard- ship, through the horrors of prison-pens and amid the shadows of death, he laid the superstructure of the greatest temple ever erected and dedi- cated to human freedom. One of Decatur county's highly respected citizens who had a part in this memorable struggle is the venerable John Johnson, a retired farmer of Burney. He remembers very well the I'olk and Tyler campaign. John Johnson is the son of Richard and Fannie (McKee) Johnson, the latter of whom was a native of Pennsylvania, born in 1805. Richard Johnson was born in Kentucky in 1799, and, after emigrating to Indiana, settled near Vevay, Indiana, in Switzerland county, the home of Colonel Welsh and Edward Eggleston. He died in 1857 in Decatur county, Indi- ana, thirty-two years after coming to Decatur county, where he entered land near the town of Burney. He made the trip with an ox team in a covered wagon, camping in the woods on the way. At the side of a giant poplar tree he and his wife built a log cabin, where they lived when John Johnson was born. Decatur county was an unbroken forest at the time, there being no roads and scarcely any paths. Such as were used and passable were designated by marked trees. The wolves were thick in this county at the time and many a time chased the father of John Johnson into his cabin. On one occasion a deer came up to the Johnson cabin with the cows. At the outbreak of the Civil War the venerable John Johnson tried to enlist under Colonel Welsh in the Seventh Regiment, Indiana Volunteer Infantry, but was rejected on account of his eyesight, being blind in one eye. He then joined the Se\enty-sixth Regiment. Indiana A'olunteer Infantry, DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 789 by resorting to a trick. In order to get past the inspection officer he changed sides with a man ne.xt to him and was successful. The Seventy-sixth Regi- ment performed vahant service in Kentucky. Mr. Johnson for the most part performed scouting and picket duty. After the war, Mr. Johnson came back to Decatur county, and resumed farming on the okl Johnson homestead, entered from the government by his father. This tract, originally comprising one hundred and sixty acres, was later enlarged by the addition of forty acres, making two hundred acres in all. He has always been a farmer and very successful in a business way. At the present time he is living with his youngest daughter. In 1 87 1 Mr. Johnson was married to Sarah Jones, a daughter of the Rev. Preston Jones, and a native of Decatur county. Mr. and ^Irs. John- son have had two children, namely : Mrs. Lilly (Johnson) Miers, the wife of Willard Miers, and Fannie, a teacher in the Burney schools, who lives with her father. Mr. Johnson's father was a Whig politically, but upon the organization of the Republican [jarty identihed himself witli that political organization. John Johnson, who was formerly a Republican, now is a Prohibitionist. For many years he has been prominent in the fraternal circles of this sec- tion, being a member of the Masonic lodge at Milford and a charter member of the Knights of Pythias lodge at Burney, Indiana. On March 4, 1913, Mr. Johnson had the misfortune to lose his wife, who passed away quietly, and whose remains are buried at Milford. At the present time he is in fair health only, but nevertheless his mind is clear and active and he has a vivid and accurate memory of the many stirring incidents of his life. He has been a useful citizen in this county and a man who well deserves the respect, which, in his declining years, is showered upon him by the people of Clay township. JOHN T. CUSKADEN. John T. Cuskaden, postmaster at St. Paul, Decatur county, Indiana, farmer, school teacher and real estate dealer, prominent Democrat and public-spirited citizen, was born on July 6, 1858, in Clay township, south- east of Milford, the son of George W. and Charity (Bartley) Cuskaden. The paternal ancestry of John T. Cuskaden came to America from Ireland. George W. Cuskaden was a native of County Donegal, Ireland, who came to America about 1850. He landed in New Orleans, and after some wandering located in New York city, where he became an Irish linen 790 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. peddler. This was the foundation of his business fortune, which has been one of more than ordinary success. After peddHng and walking across the country he finally landed in Greensburg, where he abandoned his pack and went to work on a farm for Hi Alley, for whom he worked some one or two years, after which he was married to Charity Bartley in Jasper county, Illinois. After his marriage George VV. Cuskaden purchased eighty acres of land in Illinois. He came back to Decatur county and began the usual life of a man on a rented farm in Clay township. After renting land for about two years, he purchased a farm just west of Milford, comprising one hundred acres, and located on the Shelby county line. Here, he lived for about ten years, when he sold out and moved to Oregon. After remaining in Oregon a year, he came back to Indiana and purchased a large farm in Shelby county, Indiana. A few years before his death, which occurred in March, 1914, he traded the Shelby county farm for city property in Shelbyville, where he lived the last years of his life. George W. Cuskaden was a prominent Democrat in Shelby county, and was honored with four terms as county commissioner of that county. He was a man of keen perceptions and had a broad knowledge of human nature. He was a member of the Episcopalian church. His good wife. Charity Bartley, was a native of Shelby county, born near St. Paul and the daughter of Jonathan and Elsie (Allen) Bartley, of Shelby county. The Aliens of Shelby county are descended from early settlers in this part of the country who came from Massachusetts. They brought with them from old England considerable pewter plate which was later molded into bullets for self-defense. The present Cuskaden family has in its posses- sion only one plate of this original collection. George Washington is sup- posed to have been served on this plate while in Trenton, New Jersey, some time during the Revolutionary \\'ar, by Mrs. Cuskaden's Grandmother .\llen. John T. Cuskaden grew to manhood in Shelby -county, and was mar- ried in 1880 to Orpha Wright, a daughter of John Wright, who was an emigrant from Derbyshire, England. Her mother, Annie Ridlen, was a native of Shelby county. After Mr. Cuskaden was married he and his wife lived on a farm in Shelby county until about si-xteen years ago, when he removed to St. Paul. Mr. Cuskaden taught school for twenty-two years. He has always taken an active interest in politics and is allied with the Democratic party, a stanch and true adherent of this party. He was appointed postmaster of St. Paul on .August i, 1914. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 79 1 I Mr. and Mrs. Cuskaden have had two children, Charit}- Ann, who was born on August 30, 1881, and who married Charles F. Mitchell, of Shelby county, has four children, Mildred M., Allen Wright, John William and Malcom F., and Ora Wright, on October 26, 1887, married Dora E. Rob- erts, of Shelby county, and they have one child, Clarice Winifred. There is no doulit that Mr. Cuskaden, who has always been prominent in public atTairs in Shelby and Decatur counties, owes much of his success to the splendid equipment he was permitted to obtain in the common schools of Shelby county and later in the National Normal School at Lebanon, Ohio. It was at the latter school he prepared for teaching. It was there that he developed his native capacity for learning and became a student of history and politics. John T. Cuskaden is a good man and a good citizen. LONDA WRIGHT. Londa Wright, one of the prominent farmers and citizens of Sand Creek township, Decatur county, Indiana, now living one and one-half miles north of Westport, was born on the old Richard Wright homestead in Clay township, near the Libert}- church, and is a son of Richard and Luvica (Stark) Wright, the latter of whom was a daughter of Caleb and Anna (Boone) Wright. The genealogy and family history of the Wright and Stark families may be found in the biographical sketch of Caleb Stark Wright, contained elsewhere in this volume. Richard and Luvica (Stark) Wright had a number of children, of whom Londa was the youngest. Born on the old Wright homestead in 1864, Londa Wright lived at home until he reached the age of twenty years, at which time his father died. He supplemented the education he received in the common schools of his home township in Decatur count}' by some fifty weeks spent at the Northern Indiana Normal School at Valparaiso. From the time he was twenty years old until he was twenty-three, Mr. W'right was engaged in teaching school. In 1888 Londa Wright was married to Minnie May Smiley, a daughter of Harvey and Serilda (Rol)bins) Smiley, who was born on May 17, 1870, in Sand Creek township. Decatur count}-. Indiana. Her father was a native of Franklin county, Indiana, and when a lad came to Decatur county, where he became a prosperous farmer. He was a son of William Smiley, whose family history is contained elsewhere in this volume. After their marriage, Mr. and Mrs. Wright began life together on a 792 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. farm of one hundred and eight acres, one and one-half miles north of Hor- ace, in Sand Creek township. His present farm, which comprises two hun- dred and seventeen acres of fine land, is known as the old Robert Armstrong farm and is one of the l^est to be found in Sand Creek township. Mr. and Mrs. Wright are the parents of five children, Arthur, born on April 5, 1890: Robert C, December 13. 1891 ; Lois Victoria, December 11, 1894, and Marshall and IMargaret, twins, .\pril 26, 1906. A Democrat in politics, Mr. W^right is progressive in his ]joliticaI ideas and principles, and is in no sense a hide-bound partisan. Both he and his good wife are members of the Baptist church at Westport. For- merly he was a member of the Knights of Pythias lodge at Greensburg, and during his memliership there, passed through all the chairs. Init some time ago dimitted on account of his inability to attend lodge meetings. JOSEPH CORY. In the history of the agricultural life of Decatur county, Joseph Cory,, the proprietor of "Sulphur Springs Farm" of one hundred and sixty-eight acres, four miles from Greensburg on the Vandalia pike, occupies a conspicu- ous place. During almost a half century he has been one of the repre- sentative farmers of Decatur coinU}', progressive, enterprising and perse- vering. Such qualities always bring a satisfactory reward. While Mr. Cory has benefited himself and the community in a material way, he has also been an influential factor in the educational, political and moral life of Wash- ington township. Joseph Cory was born in Clay township, Decatur county, Indiana, on December 26, 1845, ^ son of James and Martha (Dorton) Cory, the former of whom was born in 181 7, coming to Decatur county about 1844, at which time he purchased the farm now owned by George Logan, where all of his children, except the eldest, were born and grew to manhood and womanhood. Mrs. Martha (Dorton) Cory, who was born in 1822, and whose parents came from New Jersey to Union county, Indiana, where their children were Ijorn, died in June, 1899. James Cory owned two hiuidred and forty acres of fine land in Decatur county, and was a Republican in politics. He was a successful farmer and a stockman of ability and promise. Mrs. Martha Cory's brother and sisters were John, Matthew, Ann and Belle. James Cory was a son of Joseph and Nancy (Baker) Cory, the former o DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 793 of whom, born in New Jersey, in December, 1788, came to Ohio on horse- back in young manhood. The Cory family is of Scottish and EngHsh origin. Nancy (Balcer) Cory was a daughter of Daniel and Hannah (Westfield) Baker, the latter of whom was a daughter of Joseph and Alary (Halsey) Westfield. Daniel Baker was one of eight children born to Nathaniel and Abigail (Hendricks) Baker. Nathaniel Baker was born in Scotland in 171 6, and came to America in 1735. He died on January 17, 1786, in his seven- tieth year, and his wife died on Octol,)er 3, 1775, in her fifty-si.xth year.. At the age of twenty-one years, Daniel Baker, who had enlisted as a soldier in the Revolutionary War, attracted the attention of Gen. George Washington, and served on his personal staff. It was Daniel Baker who piloted General Washington through the British lines to a silversmith for the purpose of having the general's field-glasses repaired. Daniel and Hannah (Halsey) Baker were the parents of nine children, Rhoda, Mary, Jacob, Joseph, Patrick, Philip, Elizabeth, Hannah and Nancy. In 18 14 Daniel Baker and wife, wdth their children, came west to Ohio, where his death occurred in 1830, and there was inscribed upon his tombstone the fol- lowing words: "A companion of Washington." To James and Martha (Dorton) Cory si.x children were l:)orn, those besides the subject of this sketch being: Ephraim, who is a resident of Missouri; Henry, living in Iowa; Mrs. Sarah Carter, widow of Elijah Carter, living at Alexandria, Indiana; James, a resident of Clay township, living south of Burney, and Mrs. Belle I'leak, wife of Charles Pleak, living in Iowa. Joseph Cory lived at home on his father's farm until his marriage on November 14, 1871, to Leanora Deem, the daughter of Thomas and Sarah (Riner) Deem. Thomas Deem was born in Ohio in 1796, and came with his family from Ohio to this county, about 1831, locating on the farm where Joseph Cory now lives, where he died in 1853. His family remained there until about 1865, when they removed to Adams, where Mrs. Deem, widow of Thomas, died in 1895. Of their ten children five are still living, namely: Mrs. Catherine Daily, the widow of .\. G. Daily, living in Greensliurg at the age of eighty-five years; John W. Deem, of Greensburg, is eighty-four years of age; Mrs. Elizabeth Whitlow, wife of John Whitlow, a resident of Topeka, Kansas, eighty-one years of age; Oliver Deem, seventy-four years of age, a resident of Greensburg, and Mrs. Joseph Cory, the wife of the subject of this review. The deceased children of Thomas Deem and wife were Mrs. Eliza .\nne Steward, who was the wife of Barney Steward, jjoth of whom are now deceased: Lemuel, deceased: William 794 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Henry, who died while in the service of his country during the Civil \\'ar; Thomas Henry, also a soldier of the Civil War, who died while in the ser- vice, and Mrs. Mary Anna Heaton, widow of Thomas Heaton, who died on March 6, 191 5. The mother of these children, who, before her mar- riage, was Sarah Riner, was born, on October jo, 1809, in \'irginia, and removed with her parents to Butler county, Ohio, in 1846. She was mar- ried to Thomas Deem in 1825, and they removed to Decatur county in 1833. To Joseph and Leanora (Deem) Cory two children have been born, Walter B., deceased, and Irma, who married John M. Douglas, a native of this county, who is farming the old home place for Mr. Cory. "Sulphur Springs Farm" in Washington township, consists of a fine quality of soil, \\hich is gently undulating, and there general farming and stock raising are carried on. The farm is lieautifully situated and the buildings are kept in a first-class state of repair. Hogs, corn and clover are the chief products of the farm, and Joseph Cory has always been rated as a successful farmer and business man. The part which Joseph Cory has played in the agricultural development of Decatur county, Indiana, cannot be overestimated, but he has been no less prominent as a farmer than as a business man and citizen, and today, surrounded with all the material comforts of life, he enjoys the respect of Tiis neighbors and the esteem of everyone with whom he has ever come in contact. WILLIAM H. MOBLEY. In Clay township, Decatur county, Indiana, one mile east of Harts- ville and about five miles southwest of Burney on the Columbus and Greens- burg pike, lives William H. ^lobley, a distinguished citizen, farmer and mule dealer, who it may be truthfully said, had he been born and reared under the shadow of and influence of Wall street, would certainly have become one of America's foremost captains of industry and millionaires. A .comparati\'eIy young man but a man who is today known in all of the leading mule markets of the world, he could, if he decided to convert his per- sonal property into cash and liquidate whatever indebtedness he has, have, besides his twelve hundred and eighty-five acres of rich farming land in Decatur county, at least twenty thousand dollars in cash. He is one of the largest horse and mule dealers in the Middle West and buys from all parts of the United States and ships to all of the leading markets of this DECATUR COUNTY^ INDIANA. 795 country, mules worth at least a half million dollars every year. Although he has expended great muscular and physical energy in his work, he has made his brain do most of the work and this is one of the secrets of his large success. A man who is not yet forty-five years old and who has never had a single dollar given to him, his wealth today probably amounts to over two hundred thousand dollars. In 1894 he bought forty acres of land and in 1901 he had accumulated four hundred and ten acres which had cost him fifty-five dollars an acre and upon which he had a loan of twenty thousand dollars. Since then he has bought and sold several farms and has now twelve hundred and eighty-five acres. William H. Mobley, who was born in 1871, is the son of John Henry and Mary Ann (Burk) ]\Iobley, natives of Pennsylvania and of Scotch- Irish descent and who came to Indiana about 1842 and settled in Bartholo- mew county on a farm. His father was a successful farmer and business man and died in 1897 at the age of seventy-five years. He was a strong Republican in politics and leader in the councils of his party during his life. Mrs. Mary Ann Mobley was the daughter of Hunter Burk, who married a Miss Hunter, both of whom were natives of Pennsylvania. JNIrs. Mobley lives in Bartholomew county with her youngest son. She and her husband had a family of ten children, Lyman, who lives in Kansas; Mrs. Emma Wilson, of Bartholomew county; Randolph M., who is a resident of North Dakota ; Theodore, who lives in Bartholomew county ; Mrs. Margaret ^Vright, who li\es in California; Mrs. Ella Loose, who died in Iowa; Loren, who died in infancy; Arthur, who died in infancy; William H., the subject of this sketch, and James Hunter, who resides in Bartholomew county. Large successes generally have small beginnings. It was so with the career of William H. Mobley. Beginning in a small way, his rise to for- tune has become a matter of remarkable interest to the people of this county. The home farm and outbuildings are well kept and present a pleasing home appearance, nevertheless, an air of large and important business. The sale 1)arn is eighty by one hundred and thirty-two feet and the cattle laarn, fifty by eighty feet. Mr. Mobley holds auction sales attended by buyers from all parts of the country. The size of tlie Iniildings on his home farm and the Ijusiness-like appearance of the estaljlishment, suggest the auction liarns of the large cities. Besides the two large barns on the farm, there is also a l)lacksmith shop and a garage. The owner of this great business enterprise has been offered one hundred and fiftv dollars an acre for his home farm, 796 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. comprising four hundred and fifteen acres, and, according to the tax dupli- cates of Decatur county, is the highest-priced land to be found in the county. Mr. Mobley thinks real estate, and especially farm real estate, is the best investment in the world. The annual sales of the Mobley farm amount to between thirty and forty thousand dollars for every sale and at least one sale amounted to sixty-one thousand dollars. William H. Mobley buys one carload or ten carloads of mules in as many minutes and makes a thousand or two dollars quite as quickly. The expenses of his business are enormous for an enterprise of this kind. Ordinarily his telephone rent amounts to fifty dollars a month and he pays high wages to all of his employees. One man worked for him for ten years and received sixty dollars a month dur- ing the entire time. There are six tenant houses on the farm and the tenants rent land for one-third of the annual production. Men regularl}' employed on the farm, however, live at Hartsvillc. On September 25. 1914, the date of Mr. Mobley "s annual sale, five hundred mules were sold. He has from one hundred to one hundred and fifty head of mules on hand at all times of the year and raises about two hundred head of cattle every year. As a matter of fact, the large capacity for business with which Will- iam H. Mobley is endowed is not surprising when it is remembered that his deceased father was a large speculator, having the same active instinct regarding business. In 1903 Mr. Mobley was married to Grace Pearl Mj'ers, of Decatur county, the daughter of George M. and Mary Alice (Taylor) Myers, the former of whom lives one mile east of Forest Hill on a farm of one hun- dred acres, and who is a son of William Myers. Mary Alice Taylor was the daughter of George and Hannah (Wise) Taylor. To Mr. and Mrs. Mobley have been Ijorn two children, Mary b^lorine. in 1904, and Franklin Wayne, in 1908. William H. Mobley has made good because he has given strict atten- tion to his business. His striking personality has been no small factor in his success. He believes in taking chances and. moreover, he believes in taking big chances. To begin with, he is a man of highly progressive ideas. His mind is always at work. Although he received a good common school education and additional training in Hartsville College, there is nothing in his educational experience which would account for his magnificent success in life. While talking to you he leaves the impression of a man who knows what he wants and how to get it. He has always been a heavy borrower of money and is a stockholder in the Burney State Bank and a director of the Hope State Bank. He is a firm believer in his home county and believes in DF.CATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 707 investing in land in this county rather than in other states. Everything that Mr. Mobley buys, he buys at home, if it is at all possible to do so. .Although a Republican, he is interested in politics only as a citizen, and would not have the best office within the gift of the people if it were offered him. Any community is indeed fortunate to have as one of its citizens a man of the temper and ability of William H. Mobley, who is widely and favorably known. CLARENCE E. GREELEY. The Greeley Stone Company of St. Paul, Indiana, is one of the large and flourishing enterprises of Decatur county and one in which the people of this county have every reason to take great pride. This enterprise is the conception of a father and two sons, the latter being Clarence E. and R. E. Greeley, both of whom have been residents of St. Paul since the beginning of the industry in 1908. In the first place, the Greeley Stone Company, which was incorporated in 1908, with a capital stock of fifteen thousand dollars, is the largest plant of its kind in Decatur county, employing twenty-five men and 'producing twelve hundred carloads annually of stone for road building and concrete work. The plant is located on sixteen acres of land on the bank of Flat- rock and has a capacity of one thousand tons per day. The stone is exca- vated to a depth of thirty feet and elevated for grinding. The crusher which is of the Gates design, breaks the stone into different sizes and delivers the product into waiting cars on a special track owned by the com- pany. The plant is operated by a one-hundred-and-fifty-horse-power engine, which derives its power from two hundred-and fifty-horse- power boilers. Besides crushing all sizes of stones for road purposes, the company crushes and puherizes limestone dust for fertilizer. This dust is obtained jjy screening and is a by-product of which about one carload daily is produced. By chemical analysis it shows about ninety-four per cent, calcium carbide and magnesia, and is valuable for fertilizer and is extensively used in this section. The pay roll of the company is from eight hundred to one thou- sand dollars per month and in 191 4 amounted to nearly sixteen thousand dollars. The geniuses who are l)ehind this industry, actively, are Clarence E. Greeley, secretary and treasurer, and R. E. Greeley, general manager. Albert Greeley, of Muncie, Indiana, the father of Clarence E. and R. E., is the vice-president of the company. Clarence E. Greeley is a native of 798 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Warren county, Ohio, being born on the Little Miami river in 1879, the son of Albert and Tena Greeley, both of whom were born in Ohio. Albert Greeley was engaged in the saw-mill and flour-milling business at Foster Crossing, Ohio, until the beginning of the gas boom in Delaware county, Indiana, when he moved to this state. After moving to Muncie, Indiana, he engaged in the lumber business, in which he has been very successful. He is now rated as one of the substantial business men of Delaware county. In 1908 the Greeley Stone Company was incorporated and another industry added to the interest of the Greeley family. Albert Greeley was president of the Indiana Lumber Dealers' Association and is, at the present time, one of the directors of the Mutual Fire Insurance Company pf Indiana. Born in Warren county, Ohio, Clarence Greeley was educated in the public schools of Muncie, Indiana. When twenty-four years of age, he engaged in the lumber business at Selma, a small town east of Muncie, and there he was very successful. From Selma, he moved to Illinois, where he was also engaged in the lumber business. He sold out in 1908 at the time of the organization of the Greeley Stone Company. Clarence E. Greeley was married to Louise Bantly Kirk, a native of Muncie, Indiana, and the daughter of John and Bertha Kirk, also natives of Muncie. Mr. and Airs. Greeley have one daughter, Helen, who was born in 1903. R. E. Greeley, who is the general manager of the Greeley Stone Com- pany, was born in Ohio in 1881 and was educated at Muncie, Indiana, and at Culver Military School. Before the organization of the Greeley Stone Company, he was also engaged in the lumber business. In 1901 H. E. Greeley was married to \'elma Keltner, a daughter of Dr. F. M. and Rebecca Keltner, of Muncie. Mr. and Mrs. Greeley have four children, Mildred, thirteen years old ; Roljert, ten years old ; Francis, se\-en vears old, and \'irginia, six years old. Both Clarence E. and R. E. Greeley have been active in politics since coming to Decatur county. They are ardent and active Republicans as is their father also. R. E. was a member of the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks at Muncie, but has since transferred his membership to the Greensburg lodge, and R. E. Greeley is a member of the Free and Accepted Masons. Here in Decatur county, the Greeley brothers have come to be recog- nized as among its most aggressive and capable young business men. The industry which they helped to establish and which they manage, has brought thousands of dollars to this county and the people here are highly pleased with their great success. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. JOHN W. BURNEY. 799 The careers of men who have been successful are instructive as guides and incentives to those who are just beginning hfe. The examples which successful men furnish, patient purpose and consecutive endeavor, strongly illustrate what each and every man may accomplish. John Burney, a model citizen of Clay township, Decatur county, Indiana, is a man whose life is a conspicuous example of industry, courage as a citizen, wise and frugal living, cordial relations with the public generally. As a farmer he has enjoyed a large measure of success. He owns two large tracts of land, one a farm of two hundred acres, two miles northwest of Burney, and another of two hundred and eight acres, three and one-half miles southwest of town on the Columbus and Greensburg pike. The latter is known as the Graham farm. John W. Burney was born on the old Burney homestead now owned by Edward Jackson, son-in-law of S. M. Burney, in 1849. He is the son of S. M. and Sarah (Pumphrey) Burney, old citizens of this county. S. M. Burney was born in 1814 in North Carolina, and came to Decatur county with his parents in pioneer times when Clay township was nothing but a howling wilderness. The family settled on the farm that Edward Jackson now owns, and which is known as the old Burney farm. The parents of S. AI. Burney spent the remainder of their lives in Milford, the mother having died at the home of her son, S. M. He was a very successful farmer and owned several hundred acres of land in this county. He gave five hun- dred dollars to the town of Burney when it was founded and purchasecf stock in the railroad when it was built. Burney was named for him. A progres- sive, broad-minded man, his word was as good as his bond. A puljlic- spirited citizen, he donated several hundred dollars to the building of the ?^Iethodist church at Milford and at Burney. He was a stanch Democrat and true to his party. While he never asked for office, he always held at heart the welfare of his party and country. He left the impress of his char- acter and influence upon the life of this community, and died full of honors as only a private citizen who has done well his duty can die. He passed away in 1901 at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Edward Jackson. The Pumphreys are an old family in this section. John W. Burney began life for himself when about twenty-five years old. He had a small start from his father, but has accumulated most of his land and property by his own efforts. In 1875 Air. Burney was married to Mary Sharp, daughter of James SOO DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Sharp, a native of Decatur county, and an old and well-established family in Sand Creek township. The Sharps were early settlers here, and promin- ent in the social and agricultural life of the county. Eleven children have been born to Mr. and INIrs. John W. Burney, of whom Samuel, Annie, Opal and Orlif are deceased; Lula, Clara, Arthur. Clifford, Bertha, Mattie and Ethel. x\rthur lives in Adams; Bertha is the wife of Charles Gilliland. of Hope; Mattie married Clarence Thompson, of Burney; Ethel lives at home; Clifford married Blanche Horner. Although Mr. Burney is a stanch and true Democrat, he is, nevertheless, a progressive thinker, and is somewhat independent in his political thought and action. In 1890 he was elected trustee of Clay township, and gave a most efficient and satisfactory administration. He is a man well respected in this com- munity and well known. Fraternally, Mr. Burney is a member of the Knights of Pythias lodge at Burney. He is a charter member of this organization. Mr. Burney's success as a farmer he attributes to raising corn and hogs, because from these he has derived his greatest profits. ALBERT BOEING. The ancestral history of the Boling family in Decatur county goes back to the time when Benjamin Boling, a native of \"irginia and the scion of a very old family of the Old Dominion, emigrated to Decatur county in 1818, four years before the city of Greensburg was laid out. and here homestead a farm of eighty acres, now owned by Albert Boling, the present treasurer of Decatur county. The Boling family have been promi- nent property owners in Decatur county 'for at least three generations and they have also been prominent in the ci\'ic and political life of this section. No case can be cited where they have ever failed to discharge worthily the sacred trusts imposed upon them by their neighbors and fellow citizens. Albert Boling has conscientiously and faithfully performed the duties of treasurer of Decatur county, and the efficiency and honesty with which he has managed this olfice were rewarded in 1914 by his election to a second term. Albert Boling. who was born on October 4. 1867, on a farm near the Decatur and Franklin county line, is the son of William W. and Hannah •(Humphrey) Boling, the former of whom was born on October 8, 1828, and DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 80I ■died in 1898, and the latter of wliom was born in 1857 and is still living at Adams, in this county. William VV. Boling was the son of Benjamin and Elizabeth Boling, natives of Virginia, who, after coming to Decatur county in 18 18 and homesteading the farm of eighty acres now owned by Albert Boling, lived in an Indian wigwam for a time, or until they could clear a place for and erect a house. Benjamin Boling died at the age of twenty -eight, a few years after coming to Decatur county. His widow, who lived to be ninety-two years of age, died near Crawfordsville, Montgomery county, Indiana. William \\'. Boling spent the whole of his life on the ancestral farm. To William W. and Hannah (Humphrey) Boling were born five daugh- ters and seven sons, two of whom, Alice, the first born, and Jasper, the seventh born, are deceased, the former dying in January, 19 14. Of the surviving children, ]\Iary lives in Clay township; Mrs. Martha Carr lives at Frankfort; Ada is the wife of Wilbur W. Wright, of Adams; Edna lives in Indianapolis; Albert is the subject of this sketch; George is engaged in the hardware business at St. Paul, this county; Walter also lives in St. Paul; Clyde, Elmer and Owen live in Indianapolis, where the latter is an attorney. Educated in the district school of his neighborhood, located near the Decatur and Franklin county line, and in the Stubbs high school, Albert Boling was engaged in farming until he was thirty years of age. He then engaged in the grain lausiness at Adams, and remained there for seventeen years, or until his election as treasurer of Decatur county in the fall of 1912. Having been re-elected in the fall of 1914, he is now serving his' second term. Mr. Boling owns the old home farm, which now comprises alto- gether a hundred and twenty acres, city property in Indianapolis, and in Adams, where he owns a large grain elevator and residence. He is therefore entitled to rank as one of the well-to-do farmers, business men and citizens of this county. Albert Boling was married in April, 1893, when he was twenty-six years old, to Carrie Harrison, daughter of Robert Harrison, an early set- tler of Adams township. Decatur county, Indiana. To this union two chil- dren have been born, Dorothy and Robert, both of whom are attending school. For three generations the politics of the Boling family has been ■decidedly Democratic. Benjamin Boling was a Democrat, W^illiani W. Boling ■was a Democrat, and the son and grandson, Albert, the subject of this sketch, (51) 802 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. is and has always been an ardent and enthusiastic Democrat and has been for years a leader in the councils of his party. Mr. and Mrs. Boling and family are members of the Christian church, and the former is a member of St. Paul Lodge No. 368, Knights of Pythias. Honorable in all the rela- tions of life, private as well as public, Albert Boling has a host of friends in Decatur county, men who have stood valiantly at his side and fought the battles waged for the political success that is now his. He is a man who never forgets and never fails to cherish his obligations to a friend and to those who have stood by him in a common thought and for a common cause. He well deserves the confidence of the people of the citizenship of this county. RICHARD T. STOTT. That the Stott family was among the first to settle in the state of Indi- ana is proved by a tax receipt now owned by the venerable Richard T. Stott, of near Westport, Sand Creek township, Decatur county, which shows that his father, Louis Lunsford Stott, in 1813, paid taxes in Indiana for the years 1810, 181 1 and 1812. Of course this was before Indiana was admitted to the Union, and before in reality it was a state at all. The family was founded in America by the great-grandfather of Richard T. Stott, who emigrated from Germany to Scotland, and from Scotland came to America. Raleigh Stott, the grandfather of Richard T., was a soldier in the Revolutionary War, who migrated from one of the Eastern states to the Middle West. Raleigh Stott's son, who was Richard T.'s father, was a soldier in the War of 1812, and Richard T. Stott was a soldier in the Civil War, so that with the possible exception of the Mexican War, members of this family have fought valiantly in behalf of individual and personal free- dom in all of our great wars. Richard T. Stott, who was born on November 14, 1842, in Jennings county, three miles south of Westport, is the son of Louis Lunsford and Sallie (Stewart) Stott. the former of wh(.im was born in 1780 and who died in 1856. Louis Lunsford Stott had first married Miss Allen, who bore him eight children, all of whom are now deceased and the names of whom were as follow: Christopher, the father of Capt W. T. Stott, a former sheriff of Decatur county; Mrs. Hulda New, Allen, Mrs. Polly Griffin, Mrs. Mariah Kirtley, Mrs. Elizabeth Smith, Frances Marian and Mrs. Sarah Jane Gaston. By the second marriage there were three chil- DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 803 dren: D. W., who is deceased; Richard T., the subject of this sketch, and Mrs. Susan Newsome, who hves at Azaha, Indiana. After removing to Decatur from Bartholomew county, wiien Mr. Stott was four years old, his mother died, and he was taken by an uncle, Willis C. Stribbling, who lived near Sardinia, Decatur county, to be reared, together with a sister. Here he lived until he grew to manhood, attending, so far as possible, the pioneer country schools of the time and receiving a limited education. After the breaking out of the Civil War, Richard Stott was only nineteen years old. Nevertheless he enlisted on July 8, 1861, in Company H, Nineteenth Regiment, Indiana Volunteer Infantry, and served three years, three months and eleven days. Having been assigned to the com- missary department on detached service, he was under fire in nearly all of the battles and especially was on the firing line in the second battle of Bull Run, the battles of Fredericksburg, South Mountain, Antietam and Gettys- burg, as well as the Wilderness campaign. Returning home at the close of the Civil War, Mr. Stott began farm- ing in Jackson township on rented land, and late in 1865 was married. During the earlier years of his married life he lived in Decatur and Bartholo- mew counties, spending two years in Illinois later on, in 1881 and 1882. For seven years he lived in Edinburg after his removal to Decatur county, in March, 1907. He now owns a farm of twenty acres adjoining Westport. In 1865 Mr. Stott was married to Eliza Ann ChaiUe, who was born on April 3, 1844, in Jennings county, Indiana, near Butlerville, and who is the daughter of William D. and Hulda A. Chaille, the former of whom was a native of Indiana, born on December 26, 1814, and the latter of whom was born on February 19, 1806. William D. Chaille was the son of John and Jane ( Duncan ) Chaille, natives of Maryland, who came to Indiana after their marriage. A brother of Jane (Duncan) Chaille was a soldier in the Revolutionary army and was held a prisoner by the British for seven years. Mr. and Mrs. Richard T. Stott have six living children, as follow : Dora C, who lives at Richmond, Indiana, has one daughter, Leota, by his first wife, who was a Miss Davis; his present wife is Birdellia (Rose); Hulda Elizabeth is the wife of William A. Knight, who lives near Sardinia, and has four sons, James R., Wallace L., George Taylor and John F. ; William Preston lives near Auburn in the state of Washington ; Louis Eldridge, of Indianapolis, married Ro.sa Smeiser, and they have tlu'ee children, Louis Graves, Beryl Taylor and Russell Payne; John Franklin, of Colorado, married Mary Wilds, and they have one child, Martha Emily; 804 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. James M., of Edinburg, married Ethel Russell, and they have one child, Loring Russell. Politically, Mr. Stott is a Republican. He and his good wife are mem- bers of the Baptist church. Fraternally, he is a member of the Improved Order of Red Men at Edinburg, and of the Knights of Pythias at West- port. He has filled all of the chairs in the Red jNlen's lodge. Mr. Stott is also a member of Fred Small Post No. 531, Grand Army of the Republic, at Westport. RUBER C. MOORE. Perhaps no count)- in the state is on a sounder basis as regards its banking and linancial affairs than is Decatur county. In the hands of safe, conservative men, the banks of the county are noted for their solidity and for the careful manner in which the money entrusted to their care is handled. For the most part, the men engaged in banking in this county have had special training for their work and the mere technical side of banking is conducted with a degree of accuracy and a proper regard for the most conservative forms of investment, insuring to depositors a feeling of safety. Among the banks of more recent origin in this county, few, if any, have made larger strides in public confidence than the Burney State Bank, of Burney, the pleasant village in Clay township, which in late years has made such rapid progress in industrial, commercial and civic development. This bank, which was opened for business on December 22, 1913, had a capital stock of twenty-five thousand dollars, and has enjoyed an unusual degree of success. Surrounded by rich farming territorj^ peopled by substantial stock raisers and shippers, the opportunities for modern banking methods were awaiting the coming of the gentlemen who organized the Burney bank and these opportunities have been promptly and properly utilized, the number of depositors of the bank growing from the very first day of the opening of the bank, until they now number more than four hundred and are increas- ing daily. The officers of this bank are as follow : William G. Smiley, president; John W. Corya, vice-president; Huber C. Moore, cashier; the other directors being John Gartin, Frank Alexander, W. F. McCullough. Huber C. Moore was born at Morgan, Kentucky, in 1890, a son of James P. and Sarah J. (Green) Moore, both natives of Kentucky, the latter of whom was born in the city of Lexington, a daughter of John Green. Mrs. Moore died some years ago and Mr. Moore continues to make his home in DECATUR COUNTY, INqiaNA. 805 Kentucky, being one of the prominent and wealthy citizens of Pendleton county, that state. James P. Moore is one of the best-known bee breeders in the country, his apiary supplying a demand for cjueen bees in all parts of the world. He has been in the business of bee culture for the past twenty- tive years and has been very successful, the variety of bees of which he makes a specialty having created a wonderful demand. Huber C. Moore received his elementary education in the schools of Falmouth, Kentucky, following his graduation from the high school at that place with a course of one year at the Kentucky State University, after which he pursued a thorough course in a business college at Lexington. Thus equipped for a business career, Mr. Moore entered the employ of the Citizens State Bank, of Falmouth, Kentucky, as assistant cashier, remaining with this bank for two years, at the end of which time his services were secured by the Indiana National Bank, of Indianapolis, and he moved to the Indiana state capital, remaining with the Indiana National Bank at that place for a period of four years, at the end of which time his services were solicited as cashier of the newly organized bank at Burney, this county. ]\Ir. Moore accepted this proffer and upon the opening of the Burney State Bank was installed as cashier, a position which he since has occupied, his skilled and efficient service having proved most satisfactory, not only to the directors of the bank, but to the customers of the same. On December 25, 1910, Huber C. Moore was united in marriage to Olive Ruby Williams, of Whiteland, Indiana, daughter of Dr. Luke P. V. and Sarah Jane (Woollen) Williams, the former of whom is a native of Kentucky and the latter of whom is a native of Ohio. Dr. Luke P. V. Williams was born in 1862, son of Luke P. and Elizabeth P. (Simer) Williams, both natives of Kentucky, the former of whom was of Welsh descent and the latter of whom was of German descent. Sarah Jane Wool- len was the daughter of John W. and Mary C. Woollen, who moved from Ohio to Kentucky in 1883, they also being of German descent. Dr. Luke P. V. Williams, who is a direct descendant of Roger Williams, "that noble champion of religious liberty," of whom Milton thus sang, the founder of Rhode Island, who came to America from Wales in 1636, was a member of the last Kentucky constitutional convention, having repre- sented the counties of Bath and Rowan in that historic gathering. Pie was reared in Kentucky and from the days of his young manhood took an active part in the aft'airs of his community. He is a man of tremendous energy; in fact, a veritable "human dynamo," as some of his friends characterize him. He early began to take a prominent part in Kentucky politics and, 8o6 DECATUR COUIS'TY, INDIANA. besides the distinction of being a member of the constitutional convention, above noted, served as an elector on the Democratic ticket from his district in the second Cleveland campaign. Some years ago he moved to Indiana, locating at Whiteland, in Johnson county, where he organized the White- land National bank. He also was active in the organization of the Jones- ville State Bank, of Jonesville, this state, and was one of the principal pro- moters of the organization of the Burney State Bank. Mr. and Mrs. Moore are members of the Baptist church at Burney and are active in the good works of the community. Though comparatively recent additions to the society of that pleasant village, they have entered into the social life of the town with characteristic energy and are among the most enthusiastic promoters of the various and rapidly growing interests of the village. Mr. Moore is a Democrat and takes an intelligent and proper interest in the political affairs of the county, being an ardent advocate of all measures along the line of good government. He is a member of the local lodg'e of the Knights of Pythias and at present is much interested in the plan which is being promoted for the erection of a fine new two-story Pythian hall in Burney. He is an enterprising and energetic young man and his native love for the intricacies of business and financial life has given him an interest in his life's work which rapidly is bringing him to the front as one of the most prominent young financiers of Decatur county, he having displayed an ability in this direction that has inspired in the breasts of his business associates the utmost confidence and respect, they having the high- est regard for the ability he has displayed in conducting the difficult trans- actions which confront him in connection with his important position in the bank. HENRY CHRIS BOWMAN. Henry Chris Bowman, an enterprising farmer of Washington township, Decatur county, Indiana, who owns one hundred and sixty acres for which he has worked and for which he has himself paid, is a splendid type of the self- made American citizen and his career forcibly illustrates what industry, economy and good management may accomplish. There is no man living in Decatur county who deserves more personal credit for what he has accom- plished than Mr. Bowman, since he has by his own hard toil and by his systematic and methodical saving, built up his own fortune and obtained for himself and his good wife all the comforts whicli they now enjoy. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 807 Henry Chris Bowman was born on March 9, 1867, in FrankHn county, Indiana, the son of Henry and Johannah (Thesin) Bowman, natives of Germany,, who were married after coming to this country. Henry C. Bow- man left home at the age of twenty-one and came to Decatur county, working for twelve years for William Warder Hamilton, a pioneer mule dealer of Decatur county. At the end of twelve years' hard toil, he had saved fifteen hundred dollars and out of this he paid one thousand dollars down on the farm he purchased at this time and used the other five hundred dollars to stock the farm. His father, who was born in 1825, was killed in 1870 while working as a carpenter on the Enochsburg church. He had come to America in 1841. Henry, Sr., and Johannah Bowman had three children, Mary, who is deceased ; Lena, who married Clem Rowling, a dairyman, who lives near Cincinnati, and Henry C, the subject of this sketch. After the death of Mr. Bowman, the mother married again, this time to Martin Frichtman, and they had eight children, George, who lives in Decatur county; John, of Washington township; Matthew, who lives on the Robinson farm; Kate, the wife of Joseph Mincke, of Cincinnati, who died in October, 1914; Lizzie, the wife of George Lampe, of Shelby ville; Sophronia, the wife of William Oberlein, of St. Louis : Rosa, who married Chester Luther, of Shelbyville, and Celia, of Indianapolis. The mother of these children died in Shelbyville, Indiana, at the age of seventy-eight years, in 1908. At the time Henry Chris Bowman purchased his farm in Washington township, the farm was very much run down. He and his good wife lived in an old house on the place until they were able to erect a handsome, modern farm residence. The house sets back from the road and leading down to it is a large, well-kept farm. The barn, which is sixty-four by sixty feet, was built in 1908, and a corn-crib built in 191 1 cost five hundred dollars. Alto- gether about eight thousand dollars has been spent in various kinds of improvements, including fencing and tiling. When Mr. Bowman first pur- chased the farm, he sold hogs at tiiree dollars a hundred. He has had a hard time to get on in the world and has always been a hard worker. One of the secrets of his success, perhaps, is that he never sells any grain, but feeds all that he raises to hogs and cattle, selling a hundred head of hogs and from twelve to fifteen head of cattle every year. On September 2, 1884, Mr. Bowman was married to Bridget Woods, who was born on December 4, 1864, in County Clare, Ireland, and who is the daughter of John and Bridget (Kerivan) Woods, who came to America in 1880 and located on a farm three miles from Zenas, Indiana. It is a matter of interest to note here the St. Denis's church was named after Denis Woods, 8o8 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Mrs. Bowman's uncle, who gave ten acres of ground for the church. Mrs. Bowman's father died in 1889 and her mother in 1890, one year later. John and Bridget Woods had six children, Mrs. Marie Slattery, who lives in Ire- land ; John, who died in Jennings county, in 1913; Sarah, the wife of William Vansickle, of Kansas; Thomas, of near St. Denis, who married Margaret Duffy; Denis, who died in 1888, and Mrs. Bowman. To Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. Bowman have been born four children, Florine, the wife of Samuel Ardery, of Washington township; John, who lives at home on the farm; Rosa, who died at the age of twenty-three years, on April 6, 1912, and Sophia Lillian, fourteen years of age, is a student in the Greensburg high school. Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. Bowman have at their command practically every convenience which is available to anyone who lives on the farm. They are fortunate in having at their disposal a natural gas well, located on the farm, and also an artesian well.- They have most comfortable and convenient buildings located on magnificent grounds which are always well kept, and they themselves are the people who most deserve to enjoy these conveniences. Although Mr. Bowman owns an automobile along with the other comforts of life, yet he still works very hard and he and his good wife deserve great credit and praise for what they have accomplished. Genial and hospitable by nature, they are popular in the community where they reside. Mr. Bowman is a Democrat. The Bowman family are all members of the St. Mary's Catholic church at Greensburg. JAMES B. THROP. Settlement was just beginning in Decatur county, Indiana, in 182 1, when Thomas Throp, a native of New Jersey, who had immigrated to Warren county, Ohio, in 1817, came on west to Decatur county, Indiana, and pur- chased the northeast one-quarter of section 23, township 11, range 10, com- prising one hundred and sixty acres and located in what is now Fugit town- ship. The deed for this farm, which was signed by James Monroe, was dated on December 17, 1821, and this worthy pioneer had previously entered the farm where a daughter, Margaret J., now resides, an entire section which he purchased at one dollar and twenty-fi\e cents an acre. It was Thomas Throp. the father of the late James B. Throp, who established the family in Decatur county. When he came to Decatur county, the land was covered DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 809- with heavy timber, but he cleared a place for a home and later built a log cabin. His granddaughter, Margaret J. Throp, lives in the first brick house which he erected. The late James B. Throp, who at the time of his death was one of the wealthiest farmers in Decatur county, owning six hundred and eighty acres of well-cultivated and fertle land, the son of Thomas and Ellen (Emily) Throp, was born on December 22, 181 5, in JNIonmouth county, New Jersey, and died April 6, 1864. His father, who was born on October 17, 1776, was married on November 29, 1800, to Ellen Emily, who was born on November 30, 1784, and who died on August 12, 1859. They had ten children, William F., who was born on August 7, 1802; Bethany, December 15, 1804, who married Daniel Eden, of near Adams: Jane, RIarch 4, 1807, who married James Ereeman, a merchant of Greensburg; John I., March 15, 1810; Mary Ann, December 23, 1812, who married a Mr. Gilham ; James B., the subject of this sketch; Eleanor, February 10, 1818, who married Granville Kindred; Margaret Einley, April 26, 1820, married a Mr. Clark; Charles C, December 6, 1822, and Wesley, November 29, 1825. All of these children erected homes in the vicinity of the old home on the Throp land. The late James B. Throp was six years old when his parents moved from Warren county, Ohio, to Decatur county, Indiana, and when he was twelve years old, he moved with his parents to a brick mansion erected about 1827. In this house he lived continuously until his death, on April 6, 1884. Owning six hundred and eighty acres of land, during the latter years of his life, and being one of the most extensive farmers in Decatur county, he was naturally well known. The wife of the late James B. Throp was Mary Kerrick, who was born near Fairfield, in Franklin county, Indiana, on August 15, 1830, and died in 1907, at the age of seventy-six. She was the daughter of Thomas and Phoebe Kerrick, of Loudoun county, Virginia. The Kerricks comprised an old family of the Old Dominion state and included many teachers and preachers. Mrs. Thomas Kerrick's mother was a prominent member of the Quaker church. Thomas Kerrick taught a subscription school in Franklin county and was paid partly in supplies and partly in cash. He had come from Virginia to Ohio, and finally to Franklin county, Indiana, in 1857. After purchasing land in Decatur county, he moved here. Rev. Nimrod Kerrick, a son of Thomas and the brother of Mrs. Throp, was for many years a prominent teacher and minister in Decatur county. He was the eldest child and the others were James. W^alter, Armisted, Mrs. Mary Throp, Joanna, Hugh and Stephen, fourth child. • ■ SlO DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. The late James B. Throp and wife had three children, Ella, the wife of Marshall Xewhouse, who died in 1907; Phoebe A., the wife of George Wirt, who lives in Fugit township, and Margaret J., who lives on the old home- stead and who owns one hnndred and sixty acres of this farm and one hun- dred and eighty acres of her mother's original old home farm, a total of three hundred and forty acres. She is an active member of the Mt. Carmel Methodist Episcopal church. Not only was James B. Throp a prominent farmer, but he was also prominent in fraternal and religious circles in his community, being a charter member of the Masonic lodge at Clarksburg and a regular attendant at the services of the Methodist Episcopal church. In politics he was an ardent Republican, who l^elieved strongly in the principles of Abraham Lincoln and the principles of the party which Lincoln helped to found. No volume purporting to set forth the historical annals of Decatur county would be complete which did not contain a record of the life and works of James B. Throp, a well-known citizen and farmer during his day and generation, one who had a large part in the pioneer development of this splendid county now in a high state of development. James B. Throp belonged to a family which has never failed to measure up to the opportunities and obligations of their time. The Throp family has performed well its duties in all the multifarious relations of human existence. WESLEY THROP. The late Wesley Throp, of Fugit township, Decatur county, Indiana, belonged to one of the oldest families of the county, his father, Thomas Throp, a native of New Jersey, who had come to Warren county, Ohio, in 181 7, having emigrated to Decatur county and entered a tract of land from the government in 182 1, at a time when the settlement of Decatur was just beginning. Since 1821, therefore, a period of nearly a century, the Throp family have been prominent in the agricultural, political and civic life of this section, and in all of this period have contributed materially to the progress and prosperity of Decatur county. It was so with the original Thomas Throp, and also true of the family he left at the time of his death. The late Wesley Throp, who, during his lifetime, was a well-known farmer of Fugit township, and who owned tw<5 hundred and forty acres of land at the time of his death, land which is now in the possession of a son, Bruce, and a daughter. Miss Jennie, himself was born on December 29, 1825, DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 8ll the son of Thomas and Ellen (Emily) Throp, the former of whom was born on October 17, 1776, and who was married, November 29, 1800, to Ellen Emily, who was born on November 30, 1784, and who died on August 12, 1859. Of their ten children, William was born on August 7, 1802; Bethany, December 15, 1804, and married Daniel Heaton, of near Adams; Jane, March 4, 1807, married James Freeman, a merchant of Greensburg; John I., March 15, iSio; Mary Ann, December 23, 1812, and married, first, a Mr. Miller, and second, Talbert Gillam; James B. was an extensive farmer of Fugit township during his life, December 22, 181 5, and married to Mary Kerrick, who was born on August 15, 1830, and who died in 1907, and died on April 6, 1884; Eleanor, February 10, 1818, and married Granville Kindred; Margaret Fin- ley, April 26, 1820, and married Richard Clark; Charles C, December 6, 1822, married, first, Kate Roberts, and second. May Sneidiger, and Wesley, the subject of this sketch, November 29, 1825. All of the children erected homes in the vicinity of the old homestead and owned the Throp land. The subject of this sketch, who was the youngest child born to his parents, was a native of Decatur county, born after the removal of the parents from Warren county, Ohio, to Indiana, and he spent all of his life in this section. After his marriage, in 1855, he and his wife began housekeeping in a log cabin on his farm, and a few years later removed to a new frame house which he built, now occupied by his daughter, Jennie, and his son, Bruce. Here the parents lived until their death. Eventually, he became the owner of two hundred and forty acres of land, adding to his original tract as he was able to do so, and this entire farm is still intact and is still owned by members of his family. On September 4, 1855, Wesley Throp was married to Nancy M. Ardery, who was born on January 22, 1835, in Fugit township, the fifth child born to her parents, Thomas and Martha (McKee) Ardery, the former of whom was born in 1801, and who died in 1846. The latter was a daughter of Daniel McKee. Thomas and Martha (McKee) Ardery were natives of Kentucky, who were married in that state and who came with their family to Fugit township, Decatur county, Indana, in 1830. Their children were Mrs. Jane \\'allace Smith, deceased ; Mrs. Mary Alexander Walters, deceased ; ]\Irs. ^Martha Thomas Thomson, deceased; Mrs. Eliza Archibald Spear, of Rush- ville; David A., a well-known farmer of Washington township, Decatur county, Indiana, and John William, who died in youth. Of the six children born to Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Throp, three are now deceased. The living children are Bruce, the eldest child, born on No\'emlier 22, 1856, and li\'es on the old home farm with his sister, Jennie, April 4, 8l2 DECATUK COUNTY, INDIANA. 1873, the sixth child: Alattie, April 11. 1867, who was the fifth child in her parents' family, married William R. Pleak, and lives at Culpeper, Virginia. The deceased children are Luna, Omer and Bessie. Luna was born, February 4, 1859, and died on April 25, 1862: Omer, February 10, 1862, and died on October 7, 1S63; Bessie, January 24, 1865, married William Schomper, and died on November 23, 1890. She left one son, Ralph, born on November 21, 1890. He lives in Tipton county, Indiana. The father of all these children, who passed away quietly at his home in Fugt township on August 18, 1881, was a Republican in politics, and a mem- ber of the Presbyterian church at Kingston at the time of his death. He was also a charter member of Clarksburg Lodge, Free and Accepted Masons. His wife sur\'ived him many years, dying on February 3, 1914. The only male descendant of the late Wesley Throp is his son, Bruce, who is unmarried, and who lives on the home farm with his sister, Miss Jennie. Li fact, these two members of the family of Wesley Throp are the only ones who now reside in Decatur county. Miss Throp is a member of the Kingston Presbyterian church, and for many years has been active in church work. Wesley Throp was a man who was highly respected during his life, a man of honorable and humane impulses, kind to his family and cordial to his neighbors, one of the empire builders, whose work and labors live on, even though the author of the work and labors has passed away. MAX RUHL. It is a distinction of no mean importance to have lived to become the oldest living native-born settler of the township of one's residence. This distinction belongs to the venerable Max Ruhl, a retired farmer of Marion township, now living in Millhousen, himself the son of native-born German parents, who settled in this township three-quarters of a century ago. While it is a considerable distinction to have attained the rank of the oldest living native-born citizen of a township, it is a further distinction to have lived an honorable and useful life in this commtmity and this also belongs to the life works and career of Max Ruhl. The venerable Max Ruhl, a pioneer citizen and farmer of Marion town- ship, now living retired in Alillhousen, was born on February 15, 1843, o" ^ farm in this township in a log cabin, built by his father, the late Gehardt Ruhl. This farm, which now comprises two hundred acres all in one tract. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 813 is a productive body of land, which, in recent years, has been maintained in a high state of cuhivation. A niagiiiliccnt house sets back a quarter of a mile from the main road and is reached by a well-kept driveway. Gerhardt Ruhl, who was born in Germany, came to America when a young man and, after working in Cincinnati and Franklin county for some time, in 1840 settled in Marion township, one mile north of Millhousen. It is literally true that his farm was cut out of the virgin forest. Here he cleared in all one hundred and twenty acres of land and, in the meantime, built a comfortable home. He passed away at the the age of sixty-six on February 8, 1875. His wife, who, before her marriage, was Mary Ann Peters and to whom he was married at Oldenburg, Franklin county, died on March 10, 1872. They reared a family of ten children, se\en of whom are now living and three deceased, Mrs. Caroline Fischer, who was the eldest ; Christ, the fourth born, and Catherine, the youngest. The living children are. Max, the subject of this sketch; Joseph, who lives in Cincinnati; Mrs. Mary Henneker, who lives in Millhousen; John, of Minnesota; Grefor, who lives on a farm near Batesville; Adam, of India- napolis, and Anthony, of Cleveland, Ohio. When Max Ruhl was a young man, he worked in various parts of the country and, for a considerable period, was engaged in driving a team for a miller at Millhousen, Indiana. After his marriage, in 1872, he came back to the home farm and eventually purchased the interest of the other heirs to his father's and mother's estate in the home farm of one hundred and twenty acres and has since added eighty acres to the original tract, making in all two hundred acres. When we consider that practically the entire value of this two hundred acres has been created by its present owner and that he has had little assistance of anybody, we can understand his real work as a citizen, since this value could not have been created and this farm could not have been paid for and increased without hard and laborious efforts, unfailing determination, frugal living and careful management, all of which are distinctive marks of worthy citizenship. This venerable pioneer citizen deser-\'es inexpressible credit for his many sturdy qualities of head and heart. On January 7, 1872, he was married in the state of Ohio to Rosa S]5ander, who was born on February 15, 1850, and who has been the companion in all of his struggles, trials and tribulations of his early life and the triumphs and comforts of his later years. In one respect Mr. and Mrs. Ruhl have been exceptionally fortunate, since everv one of the six children born to them is still living, is married and rearing a family of his or her own. The names of the children, in the order •of their birth, are as follow: Marv, ^^^illiam. John, Clara. Anna and Law- 8l4 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. rence. Mary married Joseph Zapfe, of Jennings county, and has eight chil- dren, Luella, Esther, Harry, William, Edward, Olivia, Lawrence and Ray- mond. William, who lives on a farm in Marion township, first married Rosa Herbert. After her death, he married a Miss Rosczell and has two children, Leo and Herbert. John, who lives in Kokomo, in Howard county, Indiana, married Julia Ann Zapfe and has two children, Esther and Albert ; Clara became the wife of William Fry, of Marion township, and has three children, Alfred, Olivia and Ferdinand; Anna, who is the wife of Harry Leuken, of Marion township, has four children, Luella, Edna, Frank and Walter, and Lawrence, who married Josephine Blankman, lives on the home place. Max Ruhl has ne^•er been an office seeker nor has he e\'er been active in the councils of the Democratic party, with which he is affiliated in Marion township, since he has always preferred to devote his time and attention to his home, his family and his farm. The Ruhl family are all members of St. Marv's Catholic church at Millhousen. WILLL\M HARRISON ISGRIGG. In the industrial field there are few names Ijetter known in Decatur county than that which the reader notes above. One of the most prominent building contractors in southern Indiana, a form of activity to which he turned his attention very naturally, following the footsteps of his father, who was one of the best-known builders and decorators in this part of the state, Mr. Isgrigg has made a name for himself which must be enduring in this region, for the buildings which he has erected hereabout stand as impres- sive testimonials of the substantial character of his work. The firm of W. H. Isgrigg & Son, for Mr. Isgrigg"s son, Isaac J. Isgrigg, is associated with him, does a business of not less than one hundred thousand dollars to two hundred thousand dollars annually, employing a large numlier of workmen. This firm has made a specialty of erecting school Iniildings and is well known in this field, ha\ing in tlie last few years com- pleted twelve high and grade schools. They have also completed many other buildings, such as churches, passenger stations, factories, etc. At the time this is being written, the firm is erecting the Young Men's Christian Associa- tii)n building in Greenslnirg. Mr. Isgrigg also has done work in Cincinnati, Chicago, St. Louis, Den- ver, W^ichita, Colorado City, Ft. Scott, Dodge City and other cities in Iowa. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 815 Michigan and Nebraska and in Arkansas City and other cities in the West and South. He started contracting in 1873, operating under the firm style of Isgrigg & Brown and later under the firm style of Isgrigg & Tumulty, then for a time he again operated alone, in 1904 taking his son, Isaac J. Isgrigg, into partnership, since which time the firm has been W. H. Isgrigg & Son and has been very successful. William Harrison Isgrigg was born in the city of Greensburg, Decatur county, on April 16, 1853, the son of JetYerson and Martha Rebecca (Morris) Isgrigg, natives, respectively, of Ripley and Dearborn counties, this state. Jefferson Isgrigg, who was born on November 4, 1828, and died on July 8, 1859, was the son of Elijah Isgrigg, who came to America with his father, Daniel Isgrigg, from England when nine years of age and settled in Ripley county, this state. Jefiferson Isgrigg was reared in Ripley county and learned the trade of plasterer and stucco worker, becoming very proficient- in that line of work. On February 29, 1852. he married Martha Rebecca Alorris, who was .born six miles north of Lawrenceburg, in Dearborn county, on December 28, 1833, daughter of Isaac and Matilda (Fitzgerald) Morris, natives, respectively, of Wayne county, Virginia, and Newcastle, Kentucky. Matilda Fitzgerald was a daughter of Joseph Fitzgerald, a native of Ireland, who fought in the War of American Independence under General Wayne. Isaac Morris was a son of Amos and Rebecca (Tyler) Morris, the latter of whom was a sister of John Tyler, tenth President of the United States. On March i, 1853, a little more than a year after his marriage, Jefifer- son Isgrigg came to Greensburg to perform the ornamental work on the Decatur county court house, which was being erected at that time, and liked the town so well that he remained, making Greensburg his headciuarters the rest of his life, although his work recjuired him to travel extensively over the country. To Jefferson and Martha Rebecca (Morris) Isgrigg were born three children, Mrs. Nellie Throp, William Harrison, the subject of this sketch, and Sarah, who was born on January 26, 1856, and died on Septem- ber 29, 1857. William H. Isgrigg was educated in the schools of Greensburg and early devoted himself to the building trades, following in the footsteps of his father. With a view to learning the business literally from "the ground up" he begaii at an early age to learn the bricklayer's trade under William Dyer and Mr. J. W. Stites. At fourteen years of age he started to carrying the hod and served his apprenticeship of three years. Upon completing his trade, he started out as a journeyman workman, going westward through Illinois, Iowa and Nebraska, .\fter acquiring some very practical experience liy this 8l6 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. method, he returned to Greensburg and engaged in contracting on his own account. He later was associated with others in the same hne of business, as noted above, and in 1904 made his son, Isaac J. Isgrigg. a partner in the business, since which time the firm has been known as \\'. H. Isgrigg & Son, one of the most successful and energetic firms of building contractors in the state of Indiana. On December 10, 18S2, William Harrison Isgrigg was united in mar- riage to Vira Byrum, of this county, and to this union two children have been born, Isaac J., on December 5, 1883, who married Lela Gayette Burke and has two children, Lela Florine and William Shelton, and Mary, July 18, 1885, married Frank Hamilton, a well-known attorney, of Greensburg, a biographical sketch of whom is presented elsewhere in this volume, and has one child, a son, William Everett. Mr. Isgrigg is a Republican and gives due attention to the political affairs of his home county. He is an active, public-spirited citizen and is deeply interested in the cause of good government, throwing his influence invariably in behalf of such measures as are designed to uplift the common cause of the people. He is a member of Greensburg Lodge No. 136, Free and Accepted Masons, and is warmly interested in the aitairs of that order. Starting at the very bottom of the ladder, so to speak, Mr. Isgrigg has created for himself a very distinct position in the industrial life of this part of the state and is honored and respected by all who know him or with whijm his extensive liuilding operations bring him in contact. DR. CHARLES B. GROVER. Very likely there are no physicians practicing in Decatur county who have had a more general experience in the practice of a profession than Dr. Charles B. Grover, the proprietor of the Grover Sanatorium, which is located in the Everhart Ijlock, city of Greensburg, and which is fitted up especially for treating patients in emergency cases. The hospital has twelve beds and two attendant nurses during all hours of the day and night. It is quite natural that Dr. Charles B. Grover should be a successful physician, since he is descended from a family of medical experts, both his grandfathers having been physicians in New Hampshire, the state of his birth. Born and reared on a farm in the state of New Hampshire, Dr. Charles B. Grover is from every standpoint a self-made man. The parental home, which was located near the new Hampshire and Vermont state line, was the CTIAKI.KS I'.. (ii;()\Ki;, .M. D. DECATUR COUNTY^ INDIANA. 817 scene of his early labors and the place where his early ambitions began to shape themselves. He was born, May 21, 1851, the son of Andrew T. and Laura (Kimball) Grover, who were intelligent, progressive and broad-minded people, and successful farmers. The career of Dr. Charles B. Grover is a striking example of the young man, who is led away from home ties and home intiuences successfully to seek his fortune in the outside world. At the age of seventeen years he left home, parents and friends, and eventually arrived in Boston, where for three years he worked at various odd jobs, doing any sort of work which presented itself. A man of splendid physique, and powerful build, able to perform the most arduous labor, after three years in Boston he was lured by the opportunities for work in the Northwest, and for two years was en- gaged in various kinds of labor in the state of Minnesota. In the meantime, however, he had devoted his spare time to the study of medicine, and had spent almost two years continuously in grounding himself in the funda- mentals of medicine and surgery. When scarcely past twenty-two years of age he returned to his New Hampshire home, and was there engaged in the practice near his old home for seven years. During this period he was associated with a well-known physician of that community. Doctor Weeks. Subsequently, however, he went from New Hampshire to Chicago, and for a short time was there engaged in the practice with a Doctor Wilson. Later he practiced medicine for seven years at Frankfort, Lidiana, with a Doctor Saylor, and during all of this period was improving his medical education and enlarging his information by home study. He had come to be known by the medical profession in the various communities where he had practiced as a profound student of medical science. In 1894 Doctor Grover came to Decatur county, locating at Greens- burg, and one year later established the Doctor Grover Sanatorium, which had met with a very satisfactory measure of success. He is known today as •one of the hardest-working physicians in Decatur county, and one who prac- tices medicine for the love of the work, rather than for the desire of gain. Patients are welcome to his office and to his sanatorium. No questions are asked regarding their ability to pay for the treatment they receive. Fitted up with the latest appliances, devised for present-day practice, the sana- torium is especially equipped for the successful treatment of tubercular patients, and many of them have been cured under Doctor Grover's care and treatment. A self-made and a self-educated man, not only in medicine, but along broad and general lines of information, his entire evening periods are now devoted to the acquisition of the latest knowledge available to practi- (52) 8l8 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. tioners of the medical profession. Genial, whole-souled, and indifferent to pecuniary success, Dr. Charles B. Grover has established for himself a place in the hearts of the people of the county seat, which no one is likely very soon to take away. Earnest and sincere in his life's vocation, he deserves to be classed among the citizens of Decatur county as one of nature's own noblemen. Doctor Grover is not only a member of the De- catur County Medical Society, and of the American Association of Pro- gressive Medicine, but formerly he was a member of the American Medi- cal Association. In 1909 Dr. Charles B. Grover was married to Ethel demons, daughter of Henry demons, a well-known citizen of Greensburg, to which union two children have been born, Gladys and Laura Margarette. A member of the Christian church since 1885, Doctor Grover is one of the leading members of the Greensburg congregation, and takes a reverent interest in the affairs of the church. Fraternally, he is a member of the Knights of Pythias at Faribault, Minnesota. A Republican in politios^ he has been honored by the people of this county to election as county coroner of Decatur county, and served four years in this office, from 1908 to 19 1 2. During his residence in Clinton county he was deputy coroner there for eight years. Men of Doctor Grover's type are so few that a community which num- bers one among its citizens is fortunate indeed. When his work is finished he will have what money cannot buy, the respect and esteem of this county. EDGAR EARL HITE. The lawyer's training is vastly different now from what it was a genera- tion ago. Today the best law schools are within the range of opportunity of every young man who aspires to the legal profession. Most of the younger lawyers have been trained efificiently in the standard law schools of the coun- try. One of the well-known younger attorneys of Greensburg, Lidiana, who enjoys the advantages of a splendid preparation for the law and a splendid training in the law, is Edgar Earl Hite. Mr. Hite was born on October 3, 1881, on a farm near Clarksburg, in Decatur county, the son of Lewis E. and Elizabeth (]\liller) Hite. the former of whom was born in 1849 in Rush county, and the latter of whom was born in 1851 in Fairfield, Franklin county, and who died in 1904. Lewis E. Hite DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 819 is the son of Nicholas Hite, who married Sarah Fisher. The latter was born in 1819 in Pennsylvania, and came overland with her parents from that state in 1830. She died in 1913. The former is a native of Virginia, and was an early settler in Rnsh cmnty. Nicholas Hitc, who was born at Staunton, Virginia, owned a large tract of splendid farming land on the Rush and Decatur county line. Edgar Earl Hite is one of three children born to his parents. The others are Albert M., a farmer, and Charles C, who is fifteen years old. Edgar E. Hite, after having received a common school education, and having been graduated from the Clarksburg high school, spent the year 1900-01 in Butler College at Indianapolis, and then three months at the Indiana Law^ School at Indianapolis. Subsequently, he spent four years in Indiana University, from which he was graduated in ic;o5 with the degree of Bachelur of Laws. From 1905 to 1906 Mr. Hite was associated with Judge Douglas Morris, now on the Indiana supreme court. Coming to Greensburg in October, 1907, he began the practice of law here, and served one year as deputy prosecuting attorney. Since 1910 Mr. Hite has served as city attorney of Greensburg, having been elected by the city council of that year for four years. He was re-elected in 1914 for a term of four years. In 1904 he was a candidate for prosecuting attorney of Decatur and Bartholomew counties, and has always been active in politics. Recognized as one of the leaders of the Democratic party in this county, he served for two years as secretary of the Democratic central com- mittee in Rush county, from 1905 to 1907. From 1908 to 19 14 he was secre- tary of the Democratic central committee of Decatur county. He has also been secretary of the Democratic city committee since living in Greensburg. Edgar E. Hite was married on October 19, igo8, to Eva M. Cartmel, daughter of Joseph A. and Susan Cartmel, formerly of Clarksburg. Mrs. Hite's father is now deceased. She is the mother of one daughter. Hazel lone. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar E. Hite are members of the Christian church. Fraternally, he is a member of the Free and Accepted Masons. He is at present chancellor commander of the Greensburg lodge. Knights of Pythias, and exalted ruler Greensburg Lodge, Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks. A young man of afifable and agreeable personality, well learned in the law, Edgar E. Hite not only enjoys a comfortable practice in Decatur county, l)ut is a highly respected citizen of the county, and one who enjoys to the fullest degree the confidence of the Decatur county ])eoplc. 820 DECATUR COUNTY^ INDIANA. GEORGE M. SCHEIDLER. All success in this life represents progress, and thuse who laid duwn their Ijurden in the dangerous days of the wilderness, planted the seeds that have, by careful pruning and scientific grafting, grown into trees whose fruits have benefited, not only the new country, for which they braved the ])erils of the seas to reach, but have reached far beyond our own shores, back to the homes of their native soil, and in fact over the entire civilized world, in many instances. For those of its who are interested in evolution and scientific progress, it is a matter of deep regret that we cannot know what will be accomplished along tliese lines after we are put away under our six feet of ground. The prosperous looking farm wagon of today bears l)ut little resemblance to the oxen-drawn wagons of pioneer days. George M. Scheidler, wagoninaker, of Marion township, was born on December i, 1853, in Cincinnati. He is a son of John and Kunigunda (Steger) Scheidler. At the age of fifteen, he began to learn wagon making- and repairing and machine repairs, and now conducts a general machine and repair shop at Millhousen, Marion township, which was established in 1862 by his father, and now is operated as the John Scheidler estate. He is a stanch Democrat, was elected trustee in 1908, and served si.\ years. He was justice of the peace from 1878 to 1898, twenty consecutive years, and was notary public from 1898 to 1908, and is a member of St. Mary's church at Millhousen. His present farm covers two hundred acres of land in Marion township. John Scheidler was born in Waldthurn, Bavaria, on June 19, 1826, and died on December 18, 1898. His wife, Kunigunda (Steger) Scheidler, was born on November 6, 183 1, in Bavaria, Germany, where she was reared to young womanhood. He learned the wagon maker's trade in Germany, where he served three years as journeyman wagon wright. He came to America in 1849, ^"d was married at Cincinnati in 1850, to Kunigunda Steger, who had come over with her parents. John came with his two sisters, Mrs. Hager, of Marion township, and Mrs. Anna Haubner. who lives near Cincinnati. In 1862 John came to Millhousen and established the business now carried on by his sons. Of their children there are only five who are now living, Adam died at the age of sixty years, at Earl Park; George, subject : John is a blacksmith at Millhousen; Catherine, Michael and Joseph died in infancy; Louis is a blacksmith; Joseph is in the employ of Herbert & Son, millers, at Millhousen; Herman is a farmer and lives in Ripley county; Edward, Francis and Anthony are all dead. John established his shop :ind dwelling in a little DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 821 farm building still standing in INIiUhousen. The business grew to considerable proportions, and in 1870 Mr. Scheidler erected a brick wagon, blacksmith and general machine repair shop, as well as a handsome brick dwelling, in the town, and in addition to this, he owned several pieces of valuable town property. The shop is yet the property of the estate. Mr. Scheidler is a member of St. Mary's Catholc church at Millhousen. He was drafted in the Civil War, but paid a substitute to take his place. George M. Scheidler was twice married, first to Catharine Koelker, on June 4, 1878. She died on September 10, 1S83, leaving one daughter, Olivia (Heidlage) Oldenburg, who has a son, Victor. Mr. Scheidler's second mar- riage, on May 26, 1885, was to Josephine Huber, who died in April, 1895, leaving three sons, namely: Paul L., Lawrence J., and Carl R. Paul L. is married to Clara, daughter of Joseph Herbert, and has two sons, Norbert and Urban. He is a farmer; Lawrence attended the Terre Haute College, and graduated n 191 5, and married Anna Moorman. He is a teacher in the high school, and Carl R. is in a clothing store at Greensburg. MICHAEL HEGER. Few farmers living in Marion township deserve greater credit for their achievements and their accomplishments than Michael Heger, the largest individual land owner in Marion township, and a man who has earned every dollar of his wealth by his own indomitable energy, frugal living and careful management of his agricultural interests. The Heger estate comprises four hundred and thirty-five acres of which one hundred and fifty acres is creek bottom, and very rich soil. The remainder of the land is fairly level, and is an ideal farm, taken as a whole, for mixed farming, and stock raising. As the passerby approaches Cobb's Fork there may be seen, overlooking the wide valley and situated on a prominent eminence, the Heger homestead, which is reached b)' a gravel driveway one-fourth of a mile from the road. The spacious lawn surrounding the house is bounded by a large stone wall built in 191 1. This wall also surrounds the spacious barnyard, where there has been erected a large bank barn, forty-four by fifty feet, and which is thirty- two feet to the eaves. Equipped with two sets of buildings and this large acreage, the farm is admirably adapted to the purposes and methods of its owner and proprietor. Not only is he the largest individual landowner in Marion township, but he likewise takes a very high rank among the farmers 822 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. of this townsliip in the number of head of hve stock raised and sold on the farm. Michael Heger was born on January 5, 1859, in Oldenburg, Franklin county, Indiana, the son of Michael and Josephine (Scheidler) Heger, the former of whom was born in 1826, and who died on January 26, 1899, and the latter of whom was born in 1S31, and who now lives at Millhousen. Both natives of Germany. Michael Heger, Sr., after coming to America, settled in Cincinnati, and when a young man married there, and removed to Franklin county, where he engaged in farming and manufacturing brick. Michael, Jr., Was a mere child when the family moved to the Millhousen neighborhood. He is one of a family of nine children born to his par- ents, of whom eight are herewith named. John lives in Decatur, Illinois; Michael is the subject of this sketch; Jacob is deceased; Joseph lives in Mis- souri; William lives in Oklahoma; Frank died in infancy; Mrs. Wanner lives in Millhousen, and Mrs. Margaret Hardeback lives in Kokomo, Indiana. Patience it may be said is the keynote of Mr. Heger's success. Until he was thirty-two years old he lived on the old home farm of his parents, and then invested first in the S. T. Lowe farm on February 2, 1891. From his savings since that time he has invested in additional land until he now owns four hundred and thirty-five acres, the largest single farm in Marion town- ship. And with the able assistance of his good wife and his family he has personally earned all the money which has been in\ested in this large tract of land. On October 30, 1880, Michael Heger was married to Cassilda Witt, who was born on April 10, 185S, in Decatur, Illinois, and who is the daughter of Xavier and Marian Schott, natives of France, who died in Decatur, Illi- nois. They had been farmers by occupation. Mr. Heger journeyed to Decatur, Illinois, to meet and to marry his wife. The parents of Michael Heger, Jr., having been natives of Germany, and the parents of Mrs. Heger having been natives of France, the Heger children combine the sturdy character of their Germany ancestry with the cjuick, adaptable and keen intelligence of their French ancestry on- the maternal side. Mr. and Mrs. Heger have had six children, as follow : Mary Josephine, who was born on August 29, 1883, married William Cahill, of Indianapolis; Francis Xavier, who was born on December 6, 1884, lives at home on the farm; Mary Conacunda, who was born on September 16, 1886, married Albert Fry, a son of Henry Fry, and since their marriage in the fall of 1914 they have lived on a farm in Marion township; Mary Philomena, DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 823 who was born on October i6, 1888, died on July 11, 1891 ; John Anthony, December 27, 1890, hves at home; Ruth Cassilda, May 13, 1894, also lives at home. Mr. Heger has been identified with the Democratic party during his entire life. The Heger family are members of St. Mary's Catholic church, and are active in the affairs of this denomination. GEORGE S. PERRY. George S. Perry, a well-known farmer of Washington township, who owns one hundred and fifty acres of land three miles east of Greensburg, which was entered in 1825 by his grandfather, was born on April 6, 1866, and is the son of Leonard and Cinderella (Boyce) Perry, the former a native of Kentucky, who had come with his father, Dan S. Perry, Sr., from Ken- tucky to Washington township, Decatur county, in 1824, and the latter of whom was a native of Indiana and reared in Decatur county. After settling in Decatur county, Dan- S. Perry, Sr., cleared a small tract and erected a log cabin. He was a soldier in the War of 18 12, who had moved from the ancestral home in Virginia to the state of Kentucky, and it was his father, Frederick Perry, who was a member of the personal body guard of General Washington during the Revolutionary War. Leonard Perry, who lived on the ancestral farm for sixty years, was born in 1824 and died in 1909. His wife, who died in 1873, left a family of nine children, all of whom except George S., are residents of Greensburg, Mrs. Dinah P. Craig; Will L. and Louisa; Squire D., farmer; Mrs. Chester Edkins; Allen M. and Pierce, deceased, and Dan S., Jr., the cashier of the Greensburg National Bank. George S. Perry was born on the old home farm where he now lives and where both his father and his grandfather had lived and died. Educated in the McCoy schools, he has been engaged in farming the ancestral farm of the Perrys his whole life. He raises a great number of cattle and hogs and specializes in Poland China hogs and Shorthorn cattle. On August 16, 1892, George S. Perry was married to Retta Brodbeck, who was born in Lawrenceliurg, Indiana. They were married in Los Angeles, California, and have one child, Jean, who was born on January 16, 1895. and who is now attending a girls' seminary at Nashville, Tennessee. Mr. Perry is a Democrat. Pie is a member of the Free and Accepted Masons, the Knights of Pythias and the Benevolent and Protecti\'e Order of 824 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Elks. He is a worthy citizen of Decatur county, a capalile farmer and one who has added new distinction to the family whose name he bears. Mr. and Mrs. Perry are popular socially in \\ashington township and in Greensburg, where they are so well known. JOHN W. DeMOSS. In every community may be f(.)und men who are especially deserving, the respect and admiration of their neighbors on account of the severity of the struggle they have had for success and on account of the large measure of attainment which has attended their efforts. John W. De- Moss, the present sheriff of Decatur county, is a man who belongs to this class of citizens. Left an orphan at a tender age by the untimely death of his father while serving as a soldier in the Union army, he has had to make his own way in the world practically since he was ten years old. By the hardest kind of labor, by diligent and intelligent application to this labor, by economical living, consistent saving and careful management he has attained a position of high influence in this county, and no better evidence of the respect and admiration he enjoys can be cited than his election in 1912, and his re-election in 1914, to an office which was practically unsought. John W. DeMoss was born on August 27, 1856, in Sand Creek township,, Decatur county, Indiana, the son of Benjamin Lewis and Harriet (Masters) DeMoss, the former of whom was born in 1832 and died in 1863, and the latter of whom was born in 1840 and died in 1901. Benjamin L. DeMoss, the son of William and Elizabeth DeMoss, early settlers in Decatur county, came with his parents to this county in the late thirties of the last cen- tury. His wife, who was the daughter of John and Hannah (Byrum) Masters, was a native of Kentucky, and her parents also settled in Decatur county, with a colony of citizens, in the early thirties. Enlisting in the Thirty-seventh Regiment, Indiana Volunteer Infantry, at the breaking out of the Civil War, despite his physical weakness, because he believed it was his duty to go, Benjamin L. DeMoss became ill and died of pneumonia at Murfreesboro, Tennessee. He left a widow and three children, John W., Edward Wallace, now deceased, and Belle, who married' Andrew Martin, of Marion township. The widow and children had a hard time to get along after the death of the father and husband. With the kind assistance of tlie children's grandparents and the neighbors, however,. JOHN W. DeMOSS. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 825 they were able to live. Eventually, the mother married again, her second husband being E. E. Goodwin, and to this second union one child was born, Cortez, who is a carpenter. John W. DeMoss has always worked hard. He began earning his own way in the world at a tender age, taking employment in a stone quarry when ten years old, carrying water for the men, and gradually worked himself into a good position. He saved his money and, from doing ordinary day's work has bought and paid for two hundred acres of excellent land in Sand Creek township. A highly qualified and skillful superintendent during his employment at the Harris- City quarries, he used not only his muscles, but his brain as well, and this combination of muscular and mental energy is largely responsible for his success. In 1904 he began devoting himself to farming, choosing this rather than the foremanship of the quarries. On April 12, 1877, John W. DeMoss was married to Martha A. Jack- son, of Sand Creek township, daughter of William B. and Amanda Jackson, who was born on October 4, 1856, in Kentucky, her parents having come to Indiana during the Civil War .times. To this union three sons and three daughters have been born. Of these children, Benjamin, a farmer, is oper- ating the home farm. He married Euphemia McFarland and they have six children. Mrs. Bird Borden lives in Sand Creek township and has three children. Her husband is foreman for the contracting firm of Craig & Son, of Greensburg. Mrs. Delia Styers has four children. Her husband owns a farm in Sand Creek township. Grover, who married Lena Hamer, and has one child, is the deputy sheriff under his father; Mrs. Belle Vandiver lives on a farm in Jackson township, and has three children. Irdo is a farmer in Sand Creek township. In the fall of 1912 Mr. DeMoss was elected sheriff of Decatur county, and was re-elected to the same office in the fall of 1914. The office was practically unsought and came to him largely as a reward for his service in the past in behalf of Democratic principles and Democratic candidates. Sheriff and Mrs. DeMoss and family are members of the Methodist Episco- pal church. Fraternally, he is a member of the Masonic lodge, which he joined in 1896, and the Knights of Pythias, which he joined in 1887. Many men who have the advantage of a good start in life achieve a large measure of success, but the man who starts with nothing and who acquires a comfortable home, a competence in life, and rears a family of children, is undoubtedly entitled to the very greatest praise. Sheriff John W. DeMoss is a man of this character. Naturally he is very popular in Decatur county where he is so well known. 826 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. JOSEPH B. KITCHIN. That there are enormous differences in the casual power exerted by different minds, depending on their place of \antage in the social system, is, of course, true. Alost men merely echo the prevailing opinion or swell the general tide of passion. Even so, such men in the aggregate give to opinion its tendency to pre\ail, and to passion its tidal and overwhelming power. But the contribution of a single member of the mass is not comparable with that of the individual who occupies a place of prominence or authority. Such a mind operates at a source, coloring all that springs from it, or at a crucial point where every slight deidection is enormously magnified in the consecjuence. There are not a few such men of initiative in Decatur county, one of the best known of whom is Joseph B. Kitchin, secretary and treasurer of the Greens- burg Water Company and a man of very wide influence for good in the com- munity in which his whole life has been spent, the subject of the following interesting biographical review. Joseph B. Kitchin was born on a farm 'in Washington township, Decatur county, Indiana, on December 29, 1850, the son of Thomas and Sarah L. (Boone) Kitchin, natives, respectively, of Ohio and Kentucky, the former of whom was a son of Joseph Kitchin, a native of Pennsylvania, and who migrated to Ohio, coming thence to this county at an early day in the settle- ment of this section of Indiana. Joseph Kitchin was a farmer and blacksmith as well as a pioneer minister of the ^Methodist church. He came to this county from Pennsylvania after his sons had established homes here. He was the father of five children, Thomas; John; Bryce, who is still living at the age of eighty-six, making his home at Arkansas City, Kansas; Sarah, who married Michael Shera, a merchant of the early days in Greensburg, and ]\Iaria, who married James JNIunns and became a jsioneer settler in the state of Iowa. Thomas Kitchin, who was born in Ohio in the }-ear 181 8, emigrated to Decatur county with his brothers in the year 1839 and settled on a farm of one hundred and sixty acres of land, two miles south of Greensburg. To this farm he added, by purchase, until he had three hundred acres in one tract. He sold this and for a few years made his home in Greensburg, later mo\-ing to Lebanon, Indiana, where he resided for seven years, at the end of which time, in 1902, he returned to Greensburg, whre his death occurred in 1904. Thomas Kitchin married Sarah Luffborough Boone, a daughter of Brumfield Boone, who was born in Kentuckv, a son of Thomas Boone, a soldier in the patriot army during the Revolutionary ^^'ar, and to this union seven children were born, Rachel, the wife of Charles I. Ainsworth, of Greensburg; Joseph B., the DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 82/ immediate subject of this sketch, and Frantc B., formerly a farmer in a large way in this county, who lived in Greensburg until it became time to give his children the advantages of higher education, when, some years ago, he moved to Irvington, at Indianai^olis, the seat of Butler College; the remaining four died in infancy. The Boones are of Norman origin, the name at the time of the Norman invasion of England having been spelled Bohnn. The first family of the Bohnns to cross the channel into England settled in Lincolnshire and after- ward some of the same name settled in Devonshire. It is from this latter family that the American Boones are descended. The Bohnn coat-of-arms was used before the fourteenth century, probably having been granted by an Anglo-Norman king. Not until the sixteenth century are the names Bohnn and Boone found in the same document. The first of this family to come to America was George Boone, who was born about 1670 at the old familv seat, Brodwick, about eight miles from Exeter, England. There he married Mary IMauridge, by whom he had nine sons and two daughters. The entire family emigrated to America, landing at Philadelphia on October 10, 17 17. George Boone purchased a tract of land in what is now Bucks county, Penns^•l\•ania, and called it Exeter, in memory of the town in England from which he had emigrated. In this review it will be necessary to name but two of the sons born to the union of George and Mary ( Mauridge) Boone, Joseph and Squire. Joseph Boone was the father of Thomas Boone, Mr. Kitchin's Revolutionarv ancestor, and Squire Boone Avas the father of Daniel Boone, thus establishing the relationship of Thomas Boone and the immortal Daniel Boone, showing indeed that they were first cousins. Thomas Boone ser\'ed in the Revolutionary War as a private in Capt. James Murray's company of the Tenth Battalion of Lancaster County Militia, state of Pennsylvania, Robert Elder, colonel; having enlisted on April 12, 1 781. He was born in the town of Reading, Pennsylvania, on August 21, 1759, and married Susannah Brumfield, a Pennsylvania Quakeress, being compelled to elope with her on account of the objections raised by the Quakers at that time to any of their number marrying outside the faith. After the war, he moved to Upper Sandusk}-. Ohio, where he lived for a short time, after which he moved to Limestone, \\hich is now Maysville, Kentucky, and in the year 1791 moved to Bryant's Station, entering the blockhouse there, where Brumfield Boone was born in the same year. In 1794 Thomas Boone mo\ed to a point on the little iNIiami ri\er, just above Cincinnati, where, for a time, he operated a tavern, later going to Cincinnati. The Boone and Kitchin families still have old deeds showing Thomas Boone's ownership of property 825 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. in what is now the Bay street section of Cincinnati and some of the property owned by him is still in the possession of the family. In 1807 Thomas Boone moved to Oxford, Ohio, where he and his wife spent the remainder of their lives, their bodies now resting in the old Baptist cemetery, four and one-half miles south and a little west of Oxford, near what was the old Boone farm. Joseph Brumfield Kitchin was reared on the home farm in Washington township, this county, receiving his education in the home schools. Upon reaching manhood's estate he began farming on a tract of one hundred and sixty acres in the same township, near the town of Greensburg. He prospered and as the years passed he increased his land holdings and also became actively interested in other enterprises. He now owns two valuable farms near Greens- burg and has other extensive investments. Mr. Kitchin aided in the organiza- tion of the Greensburg National Bank in lyoo and for five years served this excellent financial institution in the capacity of cashier, still retaining a direc- torship in the bank. He is president of the Workingmen's Building and Loan Association and for some time has been secretary and treasurer of the Greens- burg \\'ater Company. On July 26, 1S71, Joseph Brumfield Kitchin was united in marriage with Nancy Elmira Robbins, a daughter of John E. and Nancy (Hunter) Robbins, a member of one of the oldest and most prominent families in Decatur county. Mrs. Kitchin also is of Revolutionary descent, tracing from William Robbins, a distinguished soldier in the war which secured to America the independence for which the patriots fought seven long years. William Rob- bins married Bethiah Vichery, who was born on December i, 1760, and to this union there were born three children, Abel, Charity and Benjamin. The father of these children was killed in the Revolutionary War soon after enlisting in the service of the patriots and his widow subsequently married the second \\'illiam Robbins, the scene of the wedding being in Guilford county, North Carolina. To this latter union there were born nine children, namely: Elizabeth, on February 5, 1788: Marmaduke and John, twins. May 15, 1789: Polly, April 9, 1791 : Nathaniel, April 5, 1793; John, February 8, 1795; William, Augtist 6, 1797. and Dosha, May 20, 1804. The father of the children above named was born in Randolph county, North Carolina, on October 21, 1761, and in October, 1777, when sixteen years of age, enlisted as a ])ri\ate in the army of General Washington, remain- ing in the ser\ice until .\ugust, 1781, during which time he had but one cap- tain, Capt. Josejih Clark, and two colonels. Colonel Dugan and Col. Anthony Sharp. Following the war, William Robbins moved from \'irginia to Ken- tucky and in 182! again moved, this time locating in Decatur county, Indiana. DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. 829 He entered a iarm from the government, about nine and one-half miles south of Greensburg, where, amid the hills, he carved a home out of the virgin forest. The first home which he set up for his family consisted of but one room, the house being constructed of hewed logs, to which was attached a lean-to, in which the family loom was set up. Presently he also erected a rude blacksmith shop of logs nearby and thus life in the new coimtry was begun, the wife busy with her loom and other household duties and the husband busy in his smithy. On September ii, 1834, thirteen years after settling in this county, William Robbins died, his body being laid away in Mt. Pleasant cemetery, about six miles south of Greensburg. The third William Robbins mentioned in this sketch, son of above, was born in the Blue Ridge mountains of Virginia on August 6, 1797, as noted above, and was taken by his parents to Henry county, Kentucky, to which point they emigrated. When, in the year 1821, they moved to the New Pur- chase, the name applied to that part of the new state in which they settled, William Robbins, then twenty-four years of age, accompanied them and selected a site for a farm for himself about one and one-half miles north of that selected by his parents. In 1822 he returned to Kentucky, where he mar- ried Eleanor Anderson, one of the pioneer belles of the neighborhood in which he formerly had lived. With his bride at his side, he returned to his new Indiana home and during that year his three sisters, together with his brothers, John and Nathaniel, settled in the same vicinity. In a short time other relati\-es of the Robbins family arrived in the same township and the Robbinses became prominent, both numerically and in the matter of the large influence they exerted in the early affairs of that part of the county, Nathaniel Robbins being the first justice of the peace in Sand Creek township. William and Eleanor Robbins lived on the farm originally selected as their home during the remainder of their days, he dying on February 3, 1866, his widow surviving him until the year 1872. To William and Eleanor (Anderson) Robbins were born four children, namely: Sarilda, in October. 1823. who married William Styers; John E., February 20, 1825, who mar- ried Nancy Hunter; James G., June 10, 1827, married Elmira Stout, and Merrit H., in 1829, married Janet Gilchrist. John E. Robbins remained on the paternal farm until November 7, 1844, the date of his marriage with Nanc}^ Hunter, daughter of Nathaniel and Elizabeth Hunter, at which time the young couple began housekeeping on a farm of forty acres given them by the bridegroom's father. They remained on this farm until February 15, 1848, by which time they had accumulated enough to purchase one hundred and sixty acres of land one nu'Ie south of 830 DECATUR COUNTY, INDIANA. Greeiisburg, on \\hich place they made their home the remainder of their hves. To this purchase they subsequently added large tracts of land and other valuable interests, until their possessions consisted of about three thousand acres of land in Decatur county and two hundred and forty acres in Bartholo- mew county, besides personal property of large value. In 1882 John E. Rob- bins helped organize the Third Xational Bank of Greensburg, of which he was director and president until his death. Under his direction and manage- ment this bank grew to be one of the most substantal and successful institu- tions in the county. Mr. Robbins died on July 22, 1896. His widow, who had shared all his interests and labor, proving in all things a most willing and efficient helpmeet, continued to live on the home farm until her long and useful life closed on May 2, 1905. To John E. and Nancy (Hunter) Robbins were born fourteen children, namely: EHzabeth Ellen, deceased; Charlotte Adaline died on February 11, 1869: Sarilda Ruth. wh