llll lllllllll 1mm1mm Illllllllllllllmllll llll ll~mlllllllll lllm llllll II lllll 1111111 fI Ill II Ill llllllll lllll llllll II llllll llllll ll Ill llll lllll lllll Ill~ m= · ======THE SCOTCH-IRISH - AND Charles Scott's - - Descendants - AND - RELATED FAMILIES ------·­ ·--

·­- ·-- - - -

- -= === BY = ==__.. ORION C. SCOTT, M. A. -=== A Great Grandson - - [ffl 11111111111m 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111t111111111111111111111111m111 IIJIII IIIIIIII IIIIII IIIII Ii ill Ii II~ Copyright, 1917, by Orion C. Scott ORION C. SCOTT, M. A.

''We live in deeds, not years; thoughts, not breaths; In feelings, not in ~gures on the dial. We should count time by heart-throbs; he most lives Who thinks most, feels the noblest, acts the best."

TO THE MEMORY

of my beloved parents; to father, who, loyal to his country, served as private, chaplain, and prisoner of war in a Confederate prison 1862-1865 and loyal to his Master served as Circuit Rider and Pastor three score years and more,: and loyal to his faith in God brought up his children in the nurture and admonition of the Lord, and to intelligent, patient mother, who was his loyai helpmeet.

FOREWORD

In preparing this book the object of the writer and compiler was two-folci. A f~inily tree or g~nealogical chart was first in mind. Research Ie·d_"io _a .discovery : That there we~e, back in the family history, stories ·and iegends of clans, Jiighlanders, ca·st1es and lords; also great migra­ tions that history verifies; and too, that a strong and virile people, whom research in the records of war and peace in America has in -these recent years placed at the front of the. stage next the footlights-the Scotch- Irish from Ulster, Ireland-were ioremost among· the founders and builders of this great republic. A ·:second object was to tell as a brief chapter__ will permit, the s•ory of the Scotch:-Irish, their migration from Scotland to ·ulster, and from Ulster to Ame,ica, and to tell the youth _of tod~y the names of a number of. Scotch­ Irish prominent jn history, past and· present. ·- During the past twelve years access has be~n had to Crerar Library, the Public Library, and to ·Newberry Library, Chicago, noted-for its large depart­ ment devoted .fto genealogy: Much has· been learned from and credit-is given Chas. A. Hanna's excel­ len1 volumes,Qn. "The .Sc_otch-lrish"-the Scot in North Britain, North. Irela1:1d and North Am'erica; Henry Jones iFord's fine work on ",The Sc9tch-lrish 1n America''; Reid's history of the "Irish Presbyterians"; C. K. Bolton/-~ '·'Scotc'1- Iris~ Pio~_eers➔ in Ulster and America"; the Pennsylvania state documents, the "Pfoceedlngs of !he Scotch.,Jrish Society of America'? JlO -volumes), and -to other books, and magazine articles. The record of Charles Scott's dese:endants had ·its beginning in 1880. ·when the· birth :of a ·spn· suggested·-~that 'he was entitled to kno,v more than his father's -parents had-· been able.. to tell·· of. ... the ancestors·... _The collection of data of the:. respective familiesr on both ··the. paternal and the. maternal sides grew as the years advanced. -- Through many discouragements inspiration .to pro·ceed w~s given by Uncle Wilson Scot(bf Spokane, Wash__.. Uncles, aunts and cousins:, pleased with the idea of a complete and permanent family reco~d, gladly sear~ed _their Bibles, and old records, and old letters. Their dicta­ tions were recorded. Acknowledgn1ent is inade with thanks for aid in collect~ng data of their respective_ tant_ilies and help fo bring the record up to date,_.to Emmett L. Scott and Geo~--.W. Scott of o·es Moines, Iowa; Mrs .. J._W. Campbell of Sen­ ecaville, .;' Mrs. Mathew l)oyle of Cambridge, Ohio; Mrs. 'Y- B. Gregg of· Barnes City, Iowa. ~the manuscript was carefUlly read by· Hon. Joseph T. Scott of~,Couer d'Alene, Idaho, in August, 1915, a few weeks ~efore his death. "Charles Scott I" Js_ used because- no authentic record· was found of an ea_r~ier member,of the family. _ ~'McCulloc·h;' is the more common spelling in Ulster ~nd,for that reasoi:i'. is adopted in this book.

BERWYN, COOK COUNTY, ILLINOIS January, 1917

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l UNST

IRELAND AND- ULSTER 7

IRELAND AND ULSTER

Ireland. Ireland, one· of the · Britrnh Isles, is 302 miles in its greatest length, :with a-n average breadth of I 10 miles. It is four­ sevenths the size of Iowa or Illinois, which have nearly equal area, and its present population is double that of Iowa and nearly equal to that of Illinois. It has four provinces, viz: Ulster, the northern­ most; Leinster in the east; !vhinster ·in the southwest; and Con- naught in the middle west. · Ireland has no dominating mountain mass. Small clusters of mountains stud the rim of a• central plain, ·portions of -which extend almost to the coast. · Ulster. . Nine counties are co·mprised in Ulster. In the center is Tyrone, with C0urities Donegal, Londonderry, _and Antrim to the north bord~ring the sea .. These four counties constitute the he.art of the Scotch-Irish country, with Belfast their chief city. · · South of Antrim and bordering on the Irish Sea is County Down, whose shores are but thirteen and one-half miles from the Scottish coast in Ayrshire. Running west are Coun~ies Armagh, Monaghan, and Fermanagh, with Cavan south of them and -bordering on the Roman Catholic province· Leinster, the chief city of which is Dublin. · The surface of Ulster is varied by low mountains, rocky foothills, moorlands and green pastures. Lakes ·dot the int~rior, and fro:rµ these and. the high lands silver streams · run to the sea, northward, chiefly. The temperature of Ulster is milder than that of New England, and warmer even than northern England. Snow rarely lies· on the ground more than a month in winter. . · The Celts were the foremost wave of westward moving tribes of the Indo-European migration to occupy Ireland. They were fel­ lowed by Picts an_d· the Romans. ·Danes, Norsemen, and Saxons likewise made their invasions, fixed some· of their customs and na.mes, and were absorbed or expelled and lost. · Populat_ion. ·For greater safe~y the people· dwelt__ in .:villages, near a st"ream on which was a. mill for grinding grain or for sawing lumber. The houses of the better sort were built with thick walls qf sto_ne, often buttressed and turretted. It was not uncommon to see . a thatched roof. This was · 1n' the early I 8th · century, and patches of flax spread upon the green grass to bleach in the sun were common, for linen manufacture, in cottage as well as factory, was the indu-try of Ulster. The wcolen industry had been ruined in 1698 by an English law that forbade export of woolens from Ire- land except to England and Wales. _ . _· The Irish or Celts, largely Roman Catholics, were early occu­ pa_nts. The Scotch-Irish followed, invited by the_ king to occupy 8 . THE ScoTCH-lRISH

confiscated Irish lands, and were in almost every village, as their Presbyterian chapels bear witness. The third element in- the ,population was th.e ruling class, largely English, supplemented by Scotch anq. Irish landowners. Of those migrating to Ulster in the sev.ente~hth century the English were Episcopalians, the Scotch were Scotch Pres.byterians, and the French were Huguenots. THE SCOTC~-lRISH James VI of Scotland took also the· throne of England: in: t603 · as James I of England. Six years-later, because the Irish chiefs in.the north of Ireland had arisen in rebellion against his rule,· he· killed and expelled the chiefs, matured a scheme to transplant his' royal subjects in the south of Scotland· to occupy the vacated ·lands in Ulster, and in 1610 the se:ttleme_nt began. The breed:. :know:n as''the Scotch-Irish was formed. in the Ulster plantation·; · ln·-:i 1640 there were 100,000 Scots in the north of Ireland, and 20,000 .. English. - · The farms· in Ulster were small, each :having its'·£.eld of potaioes. The soil was enriched. by manure and lime, and~after ·-thei :e-rop· of ,,potatoes had been gathered the flax was. sown, -perhaps a bush.eL.of

J seed by a family. . Each farm had. also its bleaching green: where the flax fibers were whitepe_d in the sun,· ·the drying · season lasting for more than half the year. Ulster, prior to the plant~tion of Scotch and English, had been the mqst backward province of Ireland. It immediately became; and has ever since been, the most . populous, progressive, '·and wealthy, says H. J. Ford. · .- The International Cyclopedia says: Scotch-Irish are the descen<;lants of Scotch settlers .. in ·ulster, Ir:eland~- · In 1608 the esta.tes of the reb.el earls of Tyrone, and TyrconneU;· in: .the Counties Armagh, Cavan, Fermanagh, Derry, Tyrone, and Dop~gal.:, 1we~e: fwf~i!ed ·!9. the crown, and the fertile land cleared of dis1oyal Irish and parceled QYi.,,.tQ Scotch and Engli~h settlers. These · were largely augmented by refugees from the ·persecµtion: ·"··'tiiid~:r Charles IL All these coalesced into one Presbyterian people :whose;:.d_esce111l; ants now number about half a millip:µ~ -~elf~st, to"':ard. 'Y~.i~h,:J~~--~otch tended to converge, shows signs of the· Scotch ·'thrift, s~rewdneS§,. ·e_ii.~fgy ,- a11cl prosperity. · · In 1625 Charles I succeeded Jam·es 1 ·as }{ihg~,. . ., . Lord Strafford was in 1633 appointed .Lord Depufy' of lrela~g. He and Archbishop Laud supported the king in his c~a.ims for ab.so~ lut_e government, and in a 'letter to Laud a little la:ter St,r$.fforq_re.7 marked "So as now I can say, the king is .as absolµte here Jin lr~-~ larid] as any prince in the whole world can· b.e", . Civil war accompanied by massacres began in 1641, anc;i w~s. hot ended until 1653. The Scotch-Irish Presbyteri3:ns wer~ ·no·longe·r obliged to subscril?e to the hateful o_ath of absolute su.bj.ectioi:i '. to the king. Thelrish Catholics were not favored by' Cromwell; who THE· ScoTcH-lRISH 9 was in power 1649 to 1660, and the Scotch-Irish type of character was indelibly fixed in Ulst~r. Uprisings, plots, coun te_rplots, and persecutions were common during the . reigns of Charles II and James · II. In 1661, under Charles II, sixty-~one Presbyterian ministers of Ulster were ejected from their benefices. Tyrconnell's siege of Londonderry, which suc­ ce3sfully resisted attack 105 ·days, Macaulay has beautifully de- scribed in his History of England. · In 1691 the Jacobite interests were ove·rthro·wn and Ireland fell into the control of William and Mary. Charles K. Bolton in his "Scotch-Irish Pioneers", says: "To strengthen the Protestant Population of Catholic Ireland induce­ ments were offered to New England families to migrate to Ireland, and these efforts of 1651, 1655, and 1656 led to the transplanting of maqy yankee families to Limerick· and Garristown, where their. de­ scendants perhaps still reside. This was under Cromwell's rule in England." In 1607 Captain Newport with 105 men in three ships,. under dire:tion of the London Company, set out from England for Amer­ ica, and in May sailed"into Chesapeake Bay. In 16G8. Captain John Smith took charge of this company of men and by vigorous government at Jam es town, Va., preserved the colony until aid came; and he was himself preserved at the hand of the gentle Pocahontas, from death by ·the Indians. In 1609 Henry Hudson in the "Half Moon" sailed up the Hud- · son river as far as Albany, N. Y. · In 1619 the first. Representative Assembly in America was held in a wooden church in Jamestown, Va., and opened with prayer by a clergyman. In 1619 a boatload of 80 women tame to the Jamestown settle­ ment to become the wives of the men of that colony. The pros­ perity of the colony began at that time. In 1619 a Dutch vessel brought 20 negroes, captured on the African coast, and sold them to the Jamestown settlers. In 1620 the "Mayflower" with its band of Puritans and their Mayflower Compact landed at Plymouth, Mass. In 1610 the Scotch, loyal subjects of James II, began the settle­ ment of Ulster and the formation or establishment in North Ireland of the breed or stock to be known in history as the Ulster Scotch­ Irish, or Ulster Presbyterians. NOTE-The first twenty years of the 17th century as shown above were years of change, years of beginnings, and years that told in a remarkable, and we may say Providential way, on the progress of the . The migrations from Ulster in the next 200 years stamped the seal of progress on this great nation. · Dean Swift in speaking of tyrannical landlords, wrote in 1720: IO THE ScoTcH-IRISH

"v\i.,,hoever travels this country [Ireland} and observes the face of nature, or the face-s and ha11i.ts, and dwellings of the· natives, will hardly think himself in: a land ,vhere la,v, religion, or common humanity is professed". And he ex­ plains that the landlords1 by '"'scre,ving and racking their tenants had reduced · the people to a worse condition than the peasants in France or the vassals in Gerniany and Poland~ The property owners were pressed by debt incurred· often in London or on the Continent. They felt forced to exact the last penny from their tenants, and, too, often turned a thrifty Scotch Protestant farmer from the land he had by incessant toil brought into good condition~ so that the land m.ight go to hvo or more Catholic families who, while living together in poverty, could ·by their united efforts pay a greater return. The Irish ,vere not fond of the plow, and the land s-uffered under their hands." Settlements of Scotch-Irish were made in different portions of the country along the Atlantic coast of America. With the death of Queen Anne in 1714 and the accession of George I a period of ferment ·in Irish emigration began anew. In that year two clergymen set out for New England, and their residence in America prob-'­ ably had more to do with the great migration of 1718 than we can as. yet demonstrate. They were the Rev. William Homes, of Strabane in County Tyrone, who settled on Martha's Vineyard, and the Rev. Thomas Craighead, his brother-in-law, of the to-wn of Donegal, who lived for some years in F reeto_wn, a village about ten miles east of Fan· River. · The first of the Scotch-Irish emigrant ships is referred to in the flews Letter of July 28-August 4 as from Londonderry, John Wilson, Master, but the ship's name is not given. · In 1718 only one ne,vspapei:-, tl:e Boston l\Tews· Letter, was being issued in North America, and of the fiiss for July, August and Septem­ ber but one copy of each issue is known to exist. These are in the 'rooms of ~he Massachusetts Historical Society, Boston. Thomas Lechmere, having been instructed by his brother-in-law, Governor Winthrop of Connecticut, to find a suitable miller among in­ coming passengers, wrote on the 28th of August: ''Eleven of ye clock at night. Ships are coming in hourly, but· no news; Irish families enough; above 200 souls are come in already, and many now hourly expected; so that I wish you were here; they are none to be sold, have all paid their passages sterl [Sterling} in Ireland.'' The reference here · is to the custom of many in those days buying their ship passage by pledging their services, making indentures for a term of two or more years to the captain of the ship, who on landing sold these passengers to buyers who held them to the terms in the documents or papers sold and turned over by the captain. These were called indented servants. The \Vinter of 1717--18 in Ireland had been very trying; smallpox, fevers, and other affiictions prevailed there, and especially in Ulster. In July· and August, 1818, from five to seven hundred Protestant immi­ grants from Ireland entered the port of Boston. THE ScoTcH-lR1sH 11

Parker in his History of Londonderry says that the pioneers ''em­ barked in five ships for Boston and arrived there Aug.. 4, 1718," In the next thirty-two years, 1718 to 1750, a period covering the :great Scotch-Irish migration from Ulster, n.vo hundred and sixty-five Quake·r a:lults o_r families came to Pennsylvania. - Of these there were -0ne hundred and thirty-five from Ulster, or just one-half, says Chas. K. Bolton. Emigration from Ulster of Scotch-Irish to America grew with the persecutions under Strafford in pushing his vigorous 'measures against nonconformity_ In ·1635 was begun the building on Belfast lough of a ship, the Ragle it~·ng; of 115 tons burden, in which in September_, 1636, one hundred forty persons set sail for New England. The stream then :started did not cease for over two hundred years, though at times the flow "ras almost as a .torrent. Bolton shows that five· ships arrived in New England from Ireland in 1714, two in 1715, three in 1716, six in 1717, fifteen in 1718, ten in 1719, and thirteen in 1720.· Robert Harper, of ·ulster, in 1734 settled at the junction of the Shenandoah and Potomac rivers, established and for many years 9perated a ferry_ and 'gave the name Harpe:i:) s Ferry to the settlement and tovvn. The famine years of 1740 and 1741 gave new impetus to emigra­ tion, and for several years thereafter the emigrants from Ulster annually amounted to 12,000 people. Pennsylvania, New England, Maryland, Virginia, and North Carolina received large numbers, though Pennsyl­ vania was the most favored- state, and the western part the chief location, since the Germans, well settled in the eastern portion, gave no encour- agement to the Scotch-Irish. · In the first two weeks of August, 1773, 3500 passengers arrived in Pennsylvania, and 500 in North Carolina from Ulster. Mr. Fisk, the historian, computed that ''benveen 1730 and 1770 more than half the Presbyterian population of Ulster came to America, where it formed more than one-sixth part of our entire population at the time of the Declaration of Independence.'' Theodore Roosevelt, in his ''Winning of the West''·, gives large credit to the Ulster Scotch-Irish in the winning of American Independ:.. ence. In 1760 a party of Scotch-Irish started a permanent settlement in Nova Scotia, and in 1761 over 300 more from Ulster arrived. Succeed... ing years added hundreds. The names of tow'ns and counties testify to the dominance of the Scotch-Irish. Lord Chancellor Clare in 1790 said: "The great misfortune of Ireland, and particularly (of] the lower classes ot its inhabitants, is that at the expiration of every lease the farm is put up to au~tion, and without considering whether he is a Protestant or a Papist­ whether he .is industrious or indolent-,vhether he is solvent or a beggar, the highest bidder is declared the tenant by the law agent of the estate, I must say to the disgrace of the landlord, and most frequently much to his advantage." I :2 THE ScoTcH-IRrsH

These were the conditions in Ulster which turned the eyes of the intelligent Protestant farmer tovvard the American colonies; The desire to emigrate had deeper and more immediate sources than a century of intercourse and sympathy between Ireland and America, says C. K. Bolton. A committee report in the House of Commons in 1774 said that the unfavorable conditions imposed by Parliament had thrown one-third of Ireland's linen weavers out of work, and that not less than 10,000, mostly from Ulster, had within the last three years emigrated to Amer­ ica. Arthur Young, a. shrewd observer. and traveler, visited Ireland in 1776 to 1779. He says that for t\\ enty or more years the emigration from Ulster was 2000 annually. He further says "The ordinary course of factory hands thrown out of employment is to enlist in the army, but in Ulster the linen manufacture is not confined to towns, but spreads into all the cabins of the country. '1 He further says "The spirit of emigration in Ireland appears to be confined to two circumstances, the Presbyterian religion and the linen manufacture. I heard of very few emigrants except among the manufacturers of that persuasion. The Catholics never ·went; they seemed not only tied· to the country but al­ most to the parish. in which their masters lived.'' Rack-rents, tithe payments, and• agrarian disturbances were griev­ ances the industrious and intelligent Scotch-Irish would not long endure. Every \"',Titer on emigration from Ulster speaks of the bearing Scotch~ Irish emigr~_tion had on the American Revolution. · Every student of history knoivs that the Irish-or Catholic· Irish-did not begin to leave Ireland until after the War of 1812. This is verified by James Mooney of the Bureau of American Ethnology in a paper published in 1913, on Racial E1eme.nts in Population. Killen, of Belfast, in his church history says "Thousands of the Ulster tenant farmers sought a home on the other side of the Atlantic, and a few years afterward appeared in arms against the mother country as asserters ·of the independence of the American republic.'' Lecky, the historian, attests that ''They went with hearts burning with indignation, and in the War of Independence they were almost to a man on the side of the insurgents. They supplied some of the best soldiers of Washington's army.'' While there were numerous settlements of the Scotch-Irish in N e\v England-Maine, New Hampshire, Massachusetts and Connecticut, in Virginia and in the Carolinas, the great majority of the Ulster emigrants to America first landed on the shores of Deleware at Lewes and N e\v­ castle, and at Philadelphia. It should be remembered that then Dela­ \Vare was a part of Pennsylvania. The ports of · the Quaker colony during the eighteenth century received most of the passenger ships sailing from Ireland. The new­ comers were . Presbyterian in faith. The most detailed, extended and trustworthy accounts of these early settlements are the histories of the establishment and growth of the Presbyterian churches. Indeed, the THE ScoTcH-IRrsH 13 preachers and leading lay officials of the churches were · the persons _in­ variably ·who took the initiative to leave the old home land and to found new colonies .in the lands the Stuart kings of England vvere offering to settlers, in their American provinces. Says Charles A. Hanna in his two-volume history of ''The Scotch­ Irish": "Pennsylvania thus became the center of the Presbyterian set­ tlements in the Nevv World, and from that province after 1735 a con­ tinuous stream of emigration flowed to the south and west.'' In some provinces, among them Massachusetts, in the early settle­ ments of the colonies church affiliation was a prerequisite to social and civic honors and office. Not so in those districts settled by the Scotch­ Irish. No denomination and no class of people more than the Presby­ terians and the Scotch-Irish stood out in words and acts 2gainst the idea of the union of church and state. Their fathers had journeyed from Scotland to Ulster in Ireland for the freedom there guaranteed to them against the dominations and exactions of the established church. They had suffered in Ulster from religious persecution, and now they \\:~ere determined by all in th~ir power to have a free church and a free state. It was Scotch-Irish stock in the Methodist Episcopal church that entered protest against the episcopacy which eventuated in the Metho.dist Pro­ testant church and in reforms in the old church. Henry Jones Ford says: ''Emigration was then a sifting process, to the advantage of America.'' Arthur Young remarked: ''Men vvho emigrate are, from the nature of circumstance, the most active, hardy, daring, bold, and resolute spirits, and probably the most mischievous also.'' But vvho, it may be asked, are the Scotch-Irish in America? And what have they done? · The Scotch-Irish. The term ''Scotch-Irish'' is peculiarly Amer­ ican and came into general use since the Revolution. The name vvas not used by the first of these emigrants, neither ,vas it applied to them by the people \vith whom they met here. · Edmund Burke, in his ''European Settlements in America'', wnt1ng in 17 5 7, says : "These are chiefly Presbyterians from the northern part of Ireland, "·ho in America are genera\ly called Scotch-Irish." And Parker's History of Londonderry, Ne,v Hampshire, p. 68, says: "Although they came to this land from Ireland, ,vhere their ancestors had a century before planted themselves, yet they retained unmixed the national Scotch character." Wm. H. Egle in his history of Dauphin county, Pa., p. 60, says: "As early as 1764 ,ve find them mentioned by the name Scotch-Irish in the legislation of the Province of Pennsylvania, when one Nathaniel Grubb, a member of the Asse~bly from Chester county, so denominated the Paxtang settlers. These people had petitioned the Quaker government in vain for THE ScoTcH-lRISH protection against the murderous attacks of the savages; and finally, despairirg of help from that source, some of them took the la,v into their own hands and made an indiscriminate slaughter of such Indians as they could find in their neighborhood. In denouncing this act to his fello,v Quakers Grubb referred to these settlers as 'a pack of insignificant Scotch-Irish, who, if they ,vere all killed, could ,vell enough be spared.' '' Henry Cabot Lodge, in reply to a criticism of his article in the Cen­ tury Magazine for September, 1891, on the "Distribution of Ability in the United States'', said: "I classify the Irish and the Scotch-Irish as two distinct race-stocks, and I believe ,the distinction to be a sound one historically and scientifically. . . . . "The Scotch-Irish from the north of Ireland, Protestant in religion and chiefly Scotch and English in blood and name, came . to this country in large numbers in the eighteenth century, while the people of pure Irish stock came scarcely at all during the colonial period, and did not emigrate here largely until the present [19th] century ,vas ,vell advanced." In his ''Dutch and Quaker Colonies'' John Fisk says: "The name Scotch-Irish is an awkward compound, and is in many quarters condemned. Curiously enough, there is no one ,vho seems to object to it so strongly as the Irish Catholic. V\thile his feelings toward the 'Far-Downer' are not affectionate, he is nevertheless anxious to claim him with his deeds and trophies, as simply Irish, and grudges to Scotland the claim to any share in producing him. It must be admitted, however, that there is a point of vie,v from which the Scotch-Irish may be regarded as more Scotch than Irish. The difficulty may be compromised by calling them Ulstermen, or Ulster Presby­ terians.'' Wherever the Scotch-Irish went, in Ulster or America, the estab­ lishment of schools \Vas one of their first cares. Mr. Fisk says that ''The Scotch-Irish population amounted to one­ sixth of the entire population in the colonies at the time of the Declara­ tion of Independence, and they were all hot for independence.'' Hanna says that Lanman' s ''Biographical Annals of the Civil Gov­ ernment'', a semi-official work, shows that up to the year 1886, when the book was printed, there had been about 1006 state and territorial governors in office since 1789, and of these 'more than 200 are of Scot­ tish descent. And, in this connection, of the colonial governors sent from ·England .to the American colonies before 1776, and of the provincial governors from that time to 17 89, up,vards of 40 were of Scotch blood. - Of the state governors from 1789 to 1885 the Scotch furnished to Pennsylvania nearly one-half of her governors; to Virginia, nearly one­ third; to North Carolina, more than one-fourth; to South Carolina, nearly one-third; to Georgia, more than one-half; to Alabama, more than one-fifth; to Mississippi, about one-fifth; to Louisiana, more than one-fifth; to Texas, about one-third; to Tennessee, nearly one-half; to Kentucky, about one-third; to Ohio,. one-half; to Indiana, more THE ScoTcH-lRISH than one-third; to Illinois, nearly one-third; to l\11issouri, nearly one­ half. Other celebrated characters of colonial times of Scottish descent may be mentioned: Captain Wm. Kidd, the notorious pirate; l\llajor Rich­ ard Stobo, and Sir Wm. Johnson, Great Britain's celebrated Indian agent in the Mohavvk Valley. General George Rogers Clark, who ,vith his Scotch-Irish soldiers, by the conquest of the territory north of the Ohio from the British in 1778 saved to the United States the states of Ohio, Indiana, l\!Iichigan, Illinois, lo\va, vVisconsin, and l\llinnesota from becoming a portion of the Dominion of Canada. Other border heroes are Adam and An­ drevv Poe, Samuel Bradley, Captain Jack, Simon Kenton, Kit Carson, David Crockett, and Samuel Houston. Of American naval heroes John Paul Jones, Oliver Hazard Perry, and ten others whose names are not so familiar. Among American generals and warriors since the .Revolution these sons of Ulster take enviable ra-nk : Andrevv Jackson, \Vinfield Scott, Zachary Taylor, U. S. Grant, James B. NicPherson, Geo. B. l\lcClellan, J. E. Johnston, Stonewall Jackson, Levv \Vallace, Fitz­ John Porter, Horace Porter, \Vinfield S. Hancock, Benjamin Nlc­ Culloch, John B. Gordon, John A. Logan, Theodore Roosevelt, Henry \V. Lawton, Frederick Funston, and thirty-eight others, all of like .blood. In American politics of this race are Thos. H. Benton, John C. Calhoun, Jefferson Davis, James G. Blaine, Thos. A. Hendricks, J. E. 11cDonald, John Bell, A.lexander H. Stevens, Samuel .Randall, J. C. Breckenridge, John G. Carlis1e, Simon Cameron, the Living­ stons of Nevv York, "\\T. B. Allison, John B. Gibson, l\Jathew S. Quay, Calvin S. Brice, :\1arcus A. Hanna, "\Vhitelaw Reid, J. Ster­ ling :\forton, \Vayne \IcVeagh, Chauncey \1. Depev;l, Robert T9dd Lincoln, Stephen A. Douglas, A.dlai E. Stevenson, S. B. Elkins, Daniel S. Lamont, H. P. Gorman, \Vm. \,1cKinley, \\1oodrow \Vil­ son. In the Presidents cabinets have been eight ·who held the office of Secretary of State; eleven Secretary of the Treasury, among them ..A.lexander Hamilton, Thomas Convin, Salmon P. Chase, and Hugh \IcCulloch; t\venty Secretary of \Var, seven Secretary· of the Xavy, five Secretary of the Interior, four Postmaster General, £xe .A.ttor­ nev General. • U. S. Senators, 1860 to 1892, over ninety, and of Speakers of the House, ten. In literature are "\"\::-ashington Irving, Edgar Allen Poe, Herman \Ielville, J eel Chandler. Harris, Le,v \Yallace, \Iarion Cra'\\:-ford, Thomas ~ elson Page, \Iaurice Thompson. In art are Gilbert Stuart, J. \IcKeil \Yhistler, \Yalter \IacE·wen, George Innes, J. Q ..A .. \Yard, James \"\:--ilson \IcDonald, James D. Smillie, .Alexander Doyle, E. F ..A.ndre"·s, Thomas Cra"'·ford, Fred­ erick \Iac\Ionnies, John "\Y. _;\lexander. 16 THE ScoTcH-IRrSH

In music Edward McDowell, Charles H. Gabriel. In science Charles Morrison, Joseph Henry and S. F. B. 1-1orse, all three of whom are credited with a share in the invention of the telegraph; also Edison and Ericsson. Then Wm. Henry, James Rumsey and Robert Fulton, for all of whom is claimed a share in the invention of the steamboat; Alexander Graham Bell, and Elisha Gray, inventors of the telephone; the McCormicks of the harvester fame; the eminent surgeons, Drs. D. Hayes Agne_w and Frank Hamilton; Ale~ander Wilson the ornithologist, and Asa Gray the botanist. Bishop 1-1cllvaine of the Episcopal church, and Bishop McKen­ dree of the l\tiethodist church. The Presidents of the United States of the Ulster Scotch-Irish racial origin, as carefully studied out by Whitelaw Reid, are Andrew Jackson, James K. Polk, James Buchanan, Andrew Johnson, Ches­ ter A. Arthur, William l\tfcl{inley; and to this company is to be added Woodrow Wilson, Scotch-Irish on th_e side of both father and mother, says "Who's Who". General John Stark, Horace Greeley, and Salmon -P. Chase, were among the descendants of the Londonderry colonists. Matthew Thornton, signer of the Declaration of Independence; Asa Gray, the world renowned botanist; and General George B. McClellan, were descendants of those· early Scotch-Irish settlers of Worcester, J\1ass. \Vm. McKinley said in a speech: "The blood of the North · Britons mingled with that of the Celt from the Green Isle and with that of the ancienJ Pict. The result of this commingling of Blood and of local environment was the Lo,vland Scotch, even then· pos­ sessing characteristics distinct from the Highlander and the Irish Celt. The Lowland recrossed the narrow sea to Ulster. His going marked an epoch in the history of civilization. The tragic history of Ireland has been for ce1:1turies food for racial hate. In this land at least, ho"\\·ever, the irremediable past should ·not be matter for quarrel; for who of us, of whatever blood, that naught of wrong tarnishes the history of his race? Scot though the Ulsterman is proud to call himself, yet he is also retransplanted Celt." Wm. McKinley further said: "As American citizens the Scotch-Irish have ample reason for pride. The Scotch-Irish were the first to proclaim for freedom in these United States; even before Lexington, Scotch-Irish blood had been· shed in behalf of Amer­ ican freedom; and the spirit of Patrick Henry animated the Scotch-Irish to a man when the great clash came. 'In the forefront of every battle ,vas seen their burnished mail; and in the gloomy rear of "retreat ·was heard their voice of constancy and courage.' Of no race or people can Milton's words be ap­ plied in juster eulogy: 'Inflamed ,vith the study of learning and the admiration of virtue; stirred up ,vith high hope of living to be brave men and worthy patriots, dear to God, and famous to all ages.' · THE ScoTcH-lRrsH ·.

"Next to their intense patriotism, the distinguishing characteristics of the Scotch-Irish are their love of learning and of religion. The Scotch-Irish is the ideal educator, and he is a uatural theologian. It ,vould be difficult to find, a college or university ,vithout a Scotch-Irishman upon its faculty. And he was the early schoolmaster of Ohio, ,vhere manual training was with the birch rod. Another marked characteristic. of the Scotch-Irish is the love of home and family, and wherever this prevails there are found manly virtue, and high integrity and good citizenship. The home and the sc1:iool­ house have been-mighty forces, marking the progress of the Scotch-Irish race."-Hanna's "The Scotch-Irish'\ Vol. 2. Wm~ McKinley added: , "While he is distinctive as a type, the Scotch-Irishman is a racial evolution -the result of a slow fusion of diverse characteristics. It is said of the Scotch­ Irish that they are doers rather than talkers or writers. True, they have been builders, but their foundations have been deep and strong and enduring. They have builded for the ages, but they write and talk quite as well as other races. Their deeds in behalf of American Independence should ever be cher­ ished in patriotic remembrance; and it is a remarkable fact-as observed by those who have taken the trouble to examine the matter-that it is only within the past few years the· recorded ·history has given just credit to the sturdy race, to whom Washington looked as his never-failing support a1=1-d as his forlorn hope when all others should have left him, when defeat should. have encom- passed him." · '. Wm. McKinley, in an address in. 1893, said: "Representatives of_ the Scotch-Irish race a-re among the brightest names in American history. They. have shorie i~ ·every great epoch of national life. So long as there is a struggle for)1uman liberty, so long as patriotism has a place in the American heart, that long· will the name and fame of ·your ances­ tors be preserved and enshrined. The roll-call is a large one; I can only pick out a name here and there: Patrick Henry, Jefferson, Hamilton, Jackson, Mad­ ison, Polk, Buchanan, the ·heroic Grant, and the Immortal Lincoln. Not only in state-craft a~d ·war have the Scotch-Irisµ distinguished themselves in Ameri-can annals.- ·T~ere are GreeJey _and Bonner in journalism, and Fulton, McCormick and Morse in invention." From Washington county, Pennsylvania, the several branches of Scotts moved one by one to the west ·and south. ·· The desc~ndents of Charles Scott I· moved first into Guernsey county, Oh10, and later to Illino~s and- Iowa, and a few of their chifdren to the·lands known and named in the early geographies as the Atnetican desert--Kansas and Texas. 18 THE ScoTT REUNION

THE SCOTT REUNION Andrew Zane Scott, during the last twenty-five years of his life, called his eleven children and their families home to a reunion every five years. They enjoyed an unusually happy occasion but a few months before his death, his good wife sharing in all the social joys. The last reunion of the family was held at the home of" Mr. Samuel C. Scott, Corning, Adams county, Iowa, August 16 to 21, 1916, and was a memorable meeting of the sons and daughters of the Scotch-Irish sons of Scott. · On invitation representatives of five other clans of the name were present: the shildren of David Scott, Rev. Geo. M~ Scott, Charles Scott III, Hamilton Scott, and Geo. P. Scott: · Large mention of it was made in the Corning, Des Moines, Os­ kaloosa,. and other state papers, and in Chicagc>"pa pers. This reunion ~as called, arranged and provided for ~y the b~o­ thers: Sam'l. C. Scott, ·of Corning, president of the Farmers' Na­ tional bank of Corning, Iowa, and Zebb Scott, of B-qrr Oak, Kansas, a farmer and stock raiser. The meals-breakfast, dinner and supper, were ·served in the parlors (basement rooms) of the Corning Congregational church by the ladies of that church and the wives of the brothers. As had been the CU$tOm of the grandfather, Charles Scott, to begin the day, so before the breakfast was served the children of the five gen­ erations, to the number of over one hundred and fifty, were called in each morning to hear "a bit of Scripture and a word of prayer"­ morning worship. A minister of a Corning or neighboring town church was present on_ invitation to invoke the Divine blessing at all meals. . After dinner each day, in the church parlors a fine literary and musical program was rendered by the younger members of the sev­ eral families, showing that the Scotts had not only "tickled the soil and made it bring forth rich harvests", but had cultivated the intel­ lects of the growing youth. Eleven children survive Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Zane Scott. The seven sons and four daughters, their children and grandchildren, now number 204, most of whom were present one or more days. The weather was ideal, the roaas fine, and the twenty-five Scott autos, with their rollicking, happy, hungry occupants lined up in front of the church at every meal time. Beds for this host were gladly provided by friends and neighbors in Corning, for those not accommodated in Samuel C. Scott's home or carried off in autos after supper to visit for the night in the homes of cousins on the farms and in adjoining county seats, where as re­ tired farmers or business men the sons had taken up a residence. Friday was observed as Cousin's Day for the young people, and Scott-Reunion of the Five Clans, Corning, Iowa, August 16-21, 1916, Corning Congregational Church

THE Scorr REUNION 19 all enjoyed a picnic at the lake. Sunday, the pastor of the Corning Congregational church, Rev. John J. Bayne, also of Scotch-Irish de­ scent, preached on the subject "Family Reunions", and made fine applications to life experiences. This service was attended by the Scotts in a body, filling the church. A census at the reunion showed farmers, doctors, clerks, mer­ chants, educators, traveling salesmen, machinists, mechanics, clerks in railroad offices, a postmistress, bankers, stock raisers, milliners, retired farmers. In church affiliation they were_ largely Methodists, Congregation­ alists, and Presbyterians. Fourteen was the largest number of children in any family. But one couple was known to have no children; they had adopted and raised to manhood two fine boys. Economy, thrift, and faith in the God of their fathers, are prominent characteristics.

Charles Scott's Descendants and Related Families-

"Go count thy sires of honored name; Add thou to thine as fair a fame; Then shall the far-off years confess That thou didst live thy branch to bless." Robert Scott Francis Scott I. Annis Porter Scott B-1750, County Donegal, B-Dec. 22, 1781, County Donegal, B-J une 22, 1813, home, Panhandle Ulster province, Ireland Ireland of West Virginia WILLIAM ( ?) ScoTT D-April 2, 1821 D-Deo. 24, 1851 D-J any. 5, 1902 M- I M-May 10, 1809 County Donegal, 2. Margaret W. Scott Ulster, Ireland Ca therine(--) Scott Mary Meek B-J une 7, 1815 B-1751 B-Mar. 28, 1788, Brook Co. Va. D-Dec. 9, 1815 and D-May 20, 1837 l D-May 8, 1850 3. Andrew McCulloch Scott Charles Scott I 1. Charles Scott II B-Dec. 16, 1816 D-Oct. 18, 1817 B-1751, County Donegal, B-April 16, 1786, County Donegal, Ireland Ireland 4. David Scott D-Dec. 7, 1840, Washington D-Oct. 29, 1857, Guernsey county, B-Oct. 11, 1818 county, Pa. Ohio, farm on National Pike, D-J une 23, 1888 --and-- three miles east of Cambridge M-Sept. 12, 1811, at the home of 5. George McCulloch Scott Annis (Porter) Scott bride near Wheeling, W.·Va. B-A ug. 27, 1820 B-1752, County Donegal, D-July 25, 1908 Ireland · 2. Alexander Scott , D-Dec. 27, 1823 B-1791, Washington county, Pa. 6. Charles Scott III Immigrated to America in D---near Cambridge, Ohio B-May 2, 1822 1790 and settled on farm in D-July 4, 1910 Washington county, Pa. 3. Susannah Scott 7. Ross Scott 4. Catherine Scott B-April 28, 1824 1. John McCulloch D-April 14, 1904 Large farm and large fam­ 5. Daughter 8. Andrew Zane Scott ily, near Wheeling, Va. -- McCULLOCH ,v. B-May 18, 1826 2. Samuel McCulloch 6. Daughter D-May 16, 1907. Lived near Wheeling, Killed in battle with In­ 9. John Alexander Scott W. Va. Ancestors orig­ dians. His heart was ta­ B-July 7, 1828 D-Oct. 14, 1849 inally from Scotland ken out and eaten by the Indians, to "make them 10. Wilson Scott by way of Ulster. King brave" B-April 8, 1831 .D-Feb. 21, 1911 Jaines I granted lQOO 3. Abraham McCulloch I I. Sarah Jane Scott acres of land in Coun- Large farm, large family, B-June 8, 1833 D-Feb. 5, 1910 j W. Va. ty Donegal to his an· I 2. Hamilton Scott cestor. 4. George McCulloch B-Nov. 13, 1885 D-Aug. 10, 1865 B-1763,Co.Donegal, Ireland D-May 19, 1836,near Wheel­ I 3. Leander Scott ing, W. Va. Susan McCulloch B-April 21, 1837 D-Nov; 5, 1862 B-May 17, 1796, on Short Creek, I 4. Susan E. Scott near Wheeling, W. Va, B-July 4, 1838 D-Oct. 8, 1914 Margaret Wilson D-June 15, 1855, on old home farm ---WILSON B-1775 on National Pike, three miles I 5. Josiah Scott l [ D-July 6, 1837 eastof Cambridge, Ohio B-Sept. 22,_ 1839 D-April 19, 1864 FAMILY OF RoBERT ScoTT

FAMILY OF ROBERT SCOTT I-1. Robert Scott, B 1750, County Donegal, Ireland, D April 2, 1821 Catherine Scott, B 1751, D l\1ay 20, 1837 II-1. Francis Scott, B Dec. 22, 1781, County Donegal, Ireland, D Dec. 24, 1851 M Oct. 10, 1809 *Mary Meek, B Mar. 28, 1788, Brook county, Va. D May 8, 1850- · CHILDREN OF FRANCIS SCOTT AND MARY MEEK III-1. Robert F. Scott, B Oct. 11, 1810, Jefferson county, 0. D April 3, f 862 M March 4, 1841, Martha Lambert Ill-2. Isaac M. Scott, B July 6, 1813, Brook county, Va. D Aug. 25, 1828 lII-3. Elizabeth Scott, B Oct. 25, 1815, Washington Co., 0. D May 22, 1898 M April 25, 1838, John Combs 111-4. Catharine Scott, B Sep. 13, 1818, Morgan county, 0. D -­ M Feb. 4, 1842, John Thrapp 111-5. Erastus H. Scott, B Sep. 16, 1820, Morgan county, 0. D Sep. 13, 1852 M Oct. 5, 1851, Mary A. Rainey 111-6. John W. Scott, B Nov. 11, 1822, Morgan county, 0. D Feb., 1907 :M Sep. 4, 1849, Miriam R. Thompson, B July 18, 1828, D Dec. 26,1891 111-7. Silvester L. Scott, B Mar. 9, 1825, Morgan county, 0. D Nov. 29, 1894 M Dec. 26, 1848, Susannah Thompson 111-8. Geo. W. Scott, B Feb. 11, 1828, Morgan county, 0. D Dec. 3, 1832 CHILDREN OF ROBERT F. SCOTT IV-1. Cyrus M. Scott, B Jan. 12, 1850 M Sep. 10, 1872, Margaret A. Moore. M June 17, 1891, Mary E. McDonald IV-2. Robert Francis Scott, B Aug. 2, 1852, D Feb., 1884 IV-3. Erastus H. Scott, B June 8, 1855 (Scott, Forc.-;man & Co., publishers high school and college textbook~), Chicag.o, Ill. M June 26, 1878, Fannie S. Bradley, Adrian, Mich. M Aug. 17, 1886, Felicia H. Hiatt lV-4. Chas. D. Scott, B Mar. 3, 1858, D --, Peoria, Ill. M Sep. 27, 1881, Laura J. Felkley lV-5. Wilber B. Scott, B Nov. 9, 1865 M Oct. 28, 1886, Maude Racey lV-6. Harrie F. Scott, B May 17, 1869 I-Robert, oldest son of Robert Scott Children: Eliz~, married Reason Reeves (Va.) Parmelia, married Robert Hopkins

*The brothers Samuel and Guy Meek, from Wales, came with Lord Baltimore to Mary­ land. Mary Meek, wife of Francis Scott, is a descendant of Guy Meek, through Isaac Meek, who in 1798 was the first sheriff of Ohio county, Va., and afterwards was a representative in the first Ohio legislature at Chillicothe, then the capital of Ohio. Isaac Meek died in 1840, age 96 years. FAMILY oF ALEXANDER ScoTT

III-Mary, married David Burt Children: Cyrus, unmarried Catherine, married Otho Wilson Fletcher, family at Columbus and , Ohio ~'"illiam, family in Nancy (Milner) Eliza, married Thos. McDonald (low~) IV-Francis V-Charles, Children: Cyrus, married at Cambridge, Ohio Franklin, unmarried ·Washington and John, unmarried, supposed to have gone to Alabama VI-John, died unmarried · ·

FAMILY OF ALEXANDER SCOTT · lI. George Scott II-2. Alexander Scott 2. Elzy Scott B 1791, Washington Co., Pa. 3. Charles P. Scott III--3. Charles P. Scott B Oct. 4, 1823. D Nov. 12, 1891 --J\;farried to-- · Mary E-- Scott B Aug~ 4, 1830. D Aug. 10, 1896 Charles Scott in the 80s owned and ran a grist mill on the river four miles north of Oskaloosa, Mahaska county, Iowa. He later moved to a farm west of Beacon, Iowa, where he died. Children: IV-1. Annie J. Scott · IV-2. Sadie E. (Fester) Scott IV-3. George A. Scott V-1. Roy Scott V-_2. George ~cott V-3. John Scott VI--1. Homer Scott VI-2. Lavon Scott ·VI-3. Marie Sco-tt IV--4. William Alpha Scott and Hazel Greenwalt I. John Scott 2. Mabel Scott P. 0. is Massena, Cass county, Iowa Harrie F. Scott Wilber T. Scott Char)cs T. Scott Cyrus M. Scott Erastus H. Scott Sons of Robert F. Scott

FAMILY OF CHARLES ScoTT I

CHARLES SCOTT I Charles Scott I, born in County Donegal, Province of Ulster, the north of Ireland, in 1751, had a brother, Robert Scott; born 1750 and died 1821. Their father's name is not known. Charles was one in the tide of Scotch-Irish immigrants to America in 1790, and landed first in Maryland, but soon moved westward to Virginia and to Washington county, Pennsylvania, where on "the old farm" he made his home until his death in 1840, aged 89 years. He was a miller and a farmer, as ,vere also several of his descendants. Seven children, three sons and four daughters, are known to have been born, though the names of Charles, John, Alexander, Susan, and Catherine are the only ones known. His wife's name was.Annis Porter. In the old records of Ulster, after the plantation of the Scotch from the south of Scotland into the north of Ireland in the 17th century, it is found the Porters were in Counties Down, Antrim, and Donegal, Robert Porter being in Antrim. · The Scotts ,vere Hugh and Alexander in Antrim, James in Cavan, George, Matthew, Patrick, Thomas, and William in County Down, and Wjlliam in Donegal. It is probable Charles' father was William, since he came from Donegal county, and William is the only one by the name of Scott in all the .records, in Donegal county. McCullochs were in Counties Antrim, Tyrone, Down, Monaghan, and Armagh. Charles Scott, in his last years, had the care and companionship of his son Charles, who moved back from Guernsey county, Ohio, to be with his aged father. The Ulster records before mentioned name James McCullough­ or McCullogh-gent of Dummovell, Wigtonshire, Scotland, as the recipient of 1000 acres of land in Ulster, grant is_sued 1610. The foregoing is in the report to King James I by his Commission in regard to the planting of colonies of Scotch in Ulster. The classification of the people in Ulster gives the English as ,Episcopalians, the Scotch as Scotch-Presbyte_rians, French as Hu­ guenots. In the county· of Donegal there were at one time: Freeholders ...... 59 Lessees for life ...... - 25 Lessees for years ...... 217 Cottagers ...... 46 Families that had no estates ...... 70 Families in all...... 417 Bodies of men...... 1106 (These were men fit for service in the army at the king's call.) ' , .. 26 FAMILY OF CHARLES SCOTT I

11ention is made in different books and old manuscripts of per­ sons whose. names are common in the Charles Scott family and related families, and ,vho resided in Ulster and ·were formerly of Scot­ land: 1. Beatrice de Carleal, Dumfriesshire. 2. ---- Carlyle, Dumfriesshire, before 1200. 3. Lordship of Carlyle. 4. Cleland or Kneland, Lanarkshire before 1300. 5. McCulloch, v\Tigtonshire and Kirkcudbrightshire before 1000. 6. ¥lilsons in Renfre,vshire, Elginshire, Fifeshire, Lanarkshire. 7. Lands were held near Belfast in Ulster by Widow Cleland, John Cle­ land, Patrick Cleland, Andre,v fylcCalla (McCullough), John, Margaret, and Widow Scott, Hugh vVilson, and Wido,v Wilson. The lVlcCulloch family, Zane family, Wilson family, and Scott family were historic families and. neighbors in Pennsylva:11-ia. Betty Zane, so the history of the Ohio Valley says, carried in her apron a quantity of po\\-'"der from the blockhouse to the fort where Wheeling, W. Va., now stands, having volunteered to risk her life run­ ning under fire of the Indians to the blockhouse and back to the be­ seiged fort rather than let any men go, saying they were more needed than she: These families were active in the \Vars \vith the Indians along the Ohio river in the vicinity of Wheeling. The tvvo older McCulloch brothers, in a bold dash from the Indians who had surrounded them on the bank of the Ohio, put spurs to their horses, which leaped over the precipice and fortunately slid safely down the bank to the river. Waving a defiant salute to the Indians, standing amazed abov_e, the brothers rode a\vay to safety. Later one of these brothers was shot from ambush by the Indians, who cut out his heart and ate it, . ''to make red man brave like paleface'', as was the belief of the Indians in that region of country. C11ARLES ScoTT II

CHARLES SCOTT II

Charles Scott II was born in Donegal county, Ulster province, Ire­ land, and at the age of four years moved with his parents, in 1790, to America, settling finally in Washington county, Pennsylvania. He was a farmer. At the age of twenty-five he married Susan McCulloch at her home on Short creek, near Wheeling, W. Va. In the spring of 1817 he went to Guernsey county, Ohio, where he entered a quarter section of government land not far from Cambridge. He built a cabin, cleared off some ground, sovved wheat, and then re­ turned to his home in Pennsylvania. The follovving spring he moved ,vith his family, going in advance with the teams and stock while Susan, his wife, and little daughter Annis, a- few_ days later followed on horse­ back. She went by way ·of her brother's home, ten miles southeast of the countyseat, that he might accompany her to find the new home. This they reached about noon, and _to their surprise were the first ones there. The husband's delay was caused by having t0 often stop to cut a way for the wagon through the for est and brush. While awaiting his arrival her brother went with his gun in search of game to cook, ·and soon returned ·with a wild turkey. This they dressed and were cooking by holding pieces over the fire on wooden spits when a noise in the brush revealed the arrival of the wagons. Soon the kettles were over the fire, and a rich repast was served to hungry wayfarers. An inspec­ tion .of the new house and surroundings, after the dinner, showed that deer had eaten up the wheat crop. From that time on it was venison in the kettle, and wild turkey often. He remained here about fifteen years, then went to Washington county, Pennsylvania, again, where he remained in the old home to care for his father until his death in 1840. In 1842 he returned to Ohio and purchased a farm three miles east of Cambridge on the National Pike, where he and Susan McCulloch, his wife, died. · Fifteen children were born to them: eleven boys and four girls.- He was a kind, firm man in his home. In public life he believed in justice and liberty. He loved God, and his Bible, ,vhich was always to be found on the center table for use in daily family worship, when children and ''hired hands'' were told to ''come in for a portion of Scripture and a word of prayer'' before the breakfast. His Scotch-Irish spirit was man if est ,vhen as one of the ''Independ­ ents'' he withdrew from the Methodist Episcopal church and was one of the founders of the Protestant Methodist denomination-_a protest against the authority of the bishop, then too often assumed and abused. The new church adopted a form of government more like that of the nation, with a president instead of a bishop. He enjoyed the fellowship of Christian people, and the· ''itinerant'' preacher of any and every denomination kne,v where ''Brother Scott on the National Pike" lived, for his home gave "velcome, a night's lodging and a full plate of the ''yellow-legged chicken''. 28 CHARLES SCOTT II

The mother of the home was widely known for her piety, her savory cooking, and the abundance on her table. Her children recognized her authority, and held her in esteem and love. Douglas Jerrold coined the phrase, ''Tickle the_ earth with a hoe and it will laugh with a harvest''. Such has been the endeavor of our fore­ fathers and a large number of their descendants, and many living have enjoyed the beneficent smile of mother earth. The thrift and prosperity of ·members of this family are thereto evidences. Challes Scott II Susan (McCulloch Scott) 1786-1857 1796-1855

,Yilson Scott Susan (Scott) Shipley 1831-1911 1838-1914

ANNIS PORTER ·cscoTT) PATTERSON 29

FAMILY OF ANNIS PORTER (SCOTT) PATTERSON III-1. Annis Porter (Scott) Patterson B-June 22, 1813, near Wheeling, Ohio county, W. Va. D-J::tny. 2, 1902, in Cambridge, Ohio, of diseases incident to old age. Buried in the family lot, St. John's cemetery, Brooke county, W. Va. M-July 22, 1832, Washington county, Pa., by Rev. Clark, to Francis Patterson B-July 5, 1808, Washington county, Pa. D-Feb. 12, 1874. Buried in St. John's cemetery, Brooke county, W. Va. Son of Mr. and Mrs. John Patterson, of vVashington county, Pa. He was a successful farmer. His home farm was a few miles east from Steubenville, Ohio, in the "panhandle" of West Virginia, Brooke county. Mrs. Patterson, at the age of five, moved with her parents from Pennsylvania to Knox township, Guernsey county, Ohio, making the journey on horseback. VVhen grown to womanhood she moved again with her parents and settled in \iv"" ashington county, Pa., ,vhere she was married and then moved to Brooke county, vV. Va., where she resided till 1878, ,vhen she moved to Wells­ burg, W. Va. In February, 1881, she moved to Cambridge, Ohio, where she lived twenty-one years, until her death. Of her eleven children, one only, survived her-Mrs. Arilla P. Moore, of Cam­ bridge, Ohio, ,vith whom' she made her home. Though quite deaf in later life, she never lost interest in family, social, and re­ ligious activities, and was a consistent follower of the Christ. Eleven children: IV-1. Elenor Jane Patterson B-Jany. 25, 1,;34, on the home farm. D-Feb. 11, 1881, in Wellsburg, W. Va. Buried m St. John's cemetery, Brooke county, W. Va. IV-2. Elizabeth (Patterson) Pool B-J uly 9, 1835, on the home farm. D---1875, at her home near St. John's church, Brooke county, W. Va. Buried in St. John's cemetery. M-Dec. 24, 1857, to Rezin Bell Pool Son of Mr. and Mri:;. Wm. Pool. B---183fi, Brooke county, W. Va. D---1904. Buried at St. John's cemetery. He resided on his farm near St. John's church, Brooke county, \iv"". Va. · Six children: V-1. ,villiam Fletcher Pool B---1859, Brooke county. W. Va. M- Mar. 7, 1887, by Rev. Rush, to Elizabeth Magee He is engaged in the mercantile business. Conducted a successful business in Collie.rs, Brooke county, v'l. Va., for a number of years ,vhen his store, d·welling, and con­ tents ,vere destroyed by fire. Chester, ,v. Va., is his present place of business. Three children: VI-1. Clark Francis Pool B---1890 in Colliers, ·w. Va. 1913, clerk in the State Treasury department, Charleston, W. Va. VI-2. vVillard Rezin Pool B--- 1897 in Colliers,W. Va. Resides in Chester, W. Va. VI-3. l\Iarguerite Marie Pool B--- 1900 in Colliers. Resides with her parents. ANNIS PORTER_ (SCOTT) PATTERSON

V-2. Lola Pool B---1861 D---1864. Buried in St. John's cemetery. V-3. Grant Pool B---1864 on the home farm near St. ·John's church, Brooke county, W. Va., where he resides. V-4. Jessie Pool B---1866 D---1910. Buried in St. John's cemetery. V-5. John Sherman Pool B-April 7, 1869 on the home farm M-May 6, 1872, in Irondale, Jefferson county, Ohio, by Rev. M. Grimes, to Margaret Williams Merchant in Irondale, Ohio One child: VI-1. Richard Malcolm Pool B-Sept: 13, 1912, in Irondale, Ohio V-6. Elmer Clark Pool B---1874, on the home farm M---1897, in Irondale, Ohio, to Ella S. Armstrong Residence is No. 321 Northview Ave., New Castle, Pa. Two children: VI-1. William R. Pool B---1898, New Castle, Pa. VI-2. Whan Pool . B---1902, New Castle, Pa. IV-3. Scott Patterson B-July 9, 1837 D-April 9, 1838. Buried in Bethel cemetery, Washington county, Pa. IV-4. Susan Margarite Patterson B-Sept. 14, 1839 D-Dec. 25, 1872, of tuberculosis. Buried in St. John's cemetery. IV-5. John Patterson B-Feb. 2, 1842 on home farm D-Dec. 5, 1865; of typhoid fever. Buried in St. John's cemetery. IV-6. Lysander Patterson B-Nov. 1, 1843 D-Jany. 29, 1873, of tuberculosis. Buried in St. John's cemetery. IV-7. David \"\Tilson Patterson B-Dec. 16, 1845 D-May 8, 1866, of blood poison. Buried in St. John's cemetery. IV-8. Sarah Ann (Patterson) Long B-July 5, 1847, on the home farm D-April 26, 1877. Buried in St. John's cemetery M-Aug. 7, 1867, by Rev. Cree, to David Nelson Long, son of Charles and l\1argery Long B-Sept. 1, 1841 D-Dec. 13, 1909, in the hospital. Pittsburgh, Pa. V-1. Frederick Patterson Long B-Sept. 27, 1869, Brooke county, W. Va. D-Sept. 6, 1898. Killed in an accident. Buried at New Alexandria, Jefferson county. Ohio M-Aug. 25, 1895, at New Alexandria, to Nannie R. Dalrymple One child VI-1. Charles Floyd Long B-April 20, 1898 D-July 23, 1898. Buried at New Alexandria, Ohio ANNIS PoRTER (ScoTT) PATTERSON 31

V-2. Charles Leroy Long B-May 30. 18i2, near New Alexandria, Ohio M-Nov. 25, i902, in Newark, Ohio, to Anna lVI. Hunt After the death of his mother, when he ·was five years of age, he went to live with his grandmother at Wellsburg, vV. Va., and later Cambridge, Ohio. He aftenvard lived at Mingo Junction, Ohio. Address is No. 16 Allen Street, Newark, Ohio. Three children: VI-1. Hellen Gertrude Long B-May 20, 1906, in Newark, Ohio VI-2. Donald Leroy Long B-July 26, 1911, in Newark, Ohio VI-3. Martha Hunt Long B-Dec. 13, 1912, in Newark, Ohio IV-9. Martin Luther Patterson B-M arch 24, 1849 D-July -, 1878. Buried in St. John's cemetery, W. Va. IV-10. Lucretia Patterson B-March 28, 1851 D-Nov. 4, 1874. Buried in St. John's cemetery, W. Va. IV-11. Arilla Nevada (Patterson) Moore B--A.ug. 3, 1856, on the home farm M-Juue 28, 1883, in Cambridge, Ohio, by Rev. James Tompson, to John \:Villiam 1.vloore, son of Elisha and Rebecca Moore B-June 28, 1855, Harrisonville, Harrison county, Ohio He is a dealer in wall paper and pictures, his store being on 7th St., and the residence No. 619 Steubenville Ave., Cambridge, 0. Two children: V-1. Florence Emma l\foore B-July 12, 1885, in Cambridge, Ohio V-2. Frank Revere Moore B-Dec. 11, 1895, in Cambridge, Ohio 1. Eleanor Shaw B-Fcb. 10, 1810 I~ D-Oct. 10, 1905 (?) I Martha Levenia Reynolds r M-Jany., 1833 B-May 20, 1835 Harrison Reynolds D-Dec. 4, 1838 (A dissipated man, deserted his family and left the country.) M-Mar., 1855, Washington Co., fa. Samuel Niel vVilliam Perine 2. Mary Sha"v B-April 26, 1818 l . g_== Age 15 D-Sept. 2, 1844 ~ I Daughter· ~ M---- 1839 L B-~ :i-- D - In infancy ~ Stephen Perine J t-t t-< ROBERT SHAW 3. Rebecca Sha"v -~ B-Feb. 20, 1790, Ireland B-June 27, 1820 0 D--March 10, 1838, Bur­ D-Junc W, 1895, Hedrick, Keokuk f See record of 1-Ij ied in Buffalo cemetery, county, Ia. David Scott's near Williamsburg, ,v ash­ M~-March 29, 1838, ,vashing_ton Co., ~ ington county, Pa. 1703 Pa. l family 0 came with his father to t:d America, settling in Wash­ David Scott ~ B-Oct. 11, 1818, Guernsey Co., 0. ington county, Pa, 1. Catherine Dimit ~ M-April 4, 1815, Cadiz, !)~June 23, 1838, Keokuk Co., Ia. B-March 20, 1840 D------~ Harrison county, Ohio . M-Dec. 21, 1878, Tama county, Ia. }{!: en 4. Eliza Jane ShaYv Irwin A. Bean --- lJ:: B-Fcb. 20, 18:!3,Washington Co.,Pa. 2. Lisan

Vol v,) 34 FAMILY OF DAVID ScoTT

DAVID SCOTT III-1. David Scott B-October 11, 1818, on a farm, Washington county, Pa. D-June 23, 1S88, on the home farm, Benton township, Keokuk county, Iowa. Buried in the Fremont cemetery, Fremont, Iowa. M-March 29, 1838. Rebecca Shaw-daughter of Robert Shaw and Agnes Wilkin, of Scotch ancestry. B-J une 20, 1820, Washington county, Pa. D-June 29, 1895, near Fremont., Iowa. Burial was in the Fremont cemetery. Children: · IV-1. R::> bert Shaw S8ott IV-2. George Wilson Scott IV-3. Harriet Ann Scott IV-4. Mary Elenor Scott IV-5. Milton Taylor Scott IV-6. Sarah Annis Scott IV-7. Charles William Alexander Scott IV-8. Nancy Elizabeth Scott IV-9. Albert Ross Scott. III-1. David Scott attended country school in Washington county, Pa., and later learned the. flouring-mill trade. He bec·ame a miller before his marriage and follo\ved the trade until the year 1840. That year he moved with his family and settled on a farm in Guernsey county, Ohio. Here he lived and drove a train of freight wagons from . Washington (or Easton), Ohio, to Wheeling, Va., and to Balti­ more, Md., before the railroads were built. In October, 1856, he moved with his family to Benton township, Keokuk county, Iowa, on a farm where he lived the remainder of his life. He died June 23, 1888, and was buried in the Fremont cemetery, Fremont, Io·wa. His death ,vas the result of stomach trouble, indiges­ tion, which affected his heart. His sickness was of short duration. He was a man of good morals and religious character. He professed faith in Jesus Christ, and was a member of ·the M. E. church for twen­ ty-five years. Rebecca Shaw, his ,vife, was of Scotch parentage and lived till marriage in Washington county, Pa. Hers was a faithful Christian life. IV-1. Robert Shaw Scott B-July 17, 1839, Washington county, Pa. D-July 5, 1915, Hedrick, Keokuk county, Iowa. M-August 23, 1866, home of the bride, Mahaska county, Iowa. Louisa Beck B---- D-September 19, 1875, on home farm, three miles east of Fremont, Iowa. Burial in Kirksville, Iowa, cemetery. Daughter of Davfd and Mary Magdeline Beck, of Mahaska county, Io,va, formerly of Hocking county, Ohio. Children: V-1. Emmett Leon Scott V-2. Harlan Alonzo Scott V-3. Robert Leroy Scott M-November 1, 1876. David Scott Rebecca (Shaw) Scott 1818-1888 1820-1895

Robert Shaw Scott Rachel Ann (:\Iartin) Scott 1839-1915

Back Row­ Milton Taylor Scott Charles William Scott Middle Row­ - Mary E. (Scott) Beck N. Elizabeth (Scott) Patton Sarah Annis (Scott) Barnes Front Row- Robert Shaw Scott George Wilson Scott Family of David Scott

FAMILY oF DAvrn ScoTT 35

Rachel Ann Martin B-March 22, 1838, Newark, Ohio. D- ---~ Residence, Hedrick, Iowa. Daughter of Daniel and Sarah Martin, of Martinsburg, lo-wa. rV-1. Robert Shaw Scott, in 1840, when one year old, went with his parents from Washington county, Pa., to Guernsey county, Ohio, ·vvhere he attended country school until 1856. At the age of seventeen years he moved with his parents and settled on a farm in Keokuk county, Iowa. Here the family improved a prairie farm and lived until the :spring of 1862. The ''gold mining', then struck him to go west to seek his fortune. On April 24, 1862, he left Fremont, Iowa, with a train of emi­ grants, 88 men, 69 women, 400 head of stock-oxen and saddle horses being used. The destination was Walla Walla, Wash., and five months a.nd five _days completed the journey. He was accompanied by two uncles, Wilson and Hamilton Scott, the only relatives in the train, which was troubled by hostile Indians much of the way. On Snake River, near American Falls, Idaho, was the worst encounter of the entire trip with the Indians. Nine of the party and a number (not known) of the Indians were killed. While crossing the plains, many other hardships, as fording and s\ivimming streams, rowing across rivers in wagon boxes) etc., were endured. In the spring of 1863, near Boise City, Idaho, he mined for gold, \Vith good success. Here he remained two years, when, by saddle and pack · horses, for there were no railroads west of the Missouri river at that time, he returned . to Io\Va. He purchased the farm located midway between Fremont and Hedrick, which he had helped improve and which, with additions since made, is known as the ''home farm~'' Louisa Beck, his first wife, and the mother of .his three sons, was of sturdy, religious, German parentage. Her people had come from Hocking county, Ohio, to Mahaska county, Iowa. From marriage till her death in .187 5 they lived on the "home farm." . Rachel Ann .Martin, his second ·wife, was a true. helpmate and a loving mother to his children, and resides with the oldest son in Des Moines, Iovva. She was interested and helpful in the social and reli­ gious activities of her town. She loved the church and was a: regular attendant, as was her husband, of the M. E. church. In 1892 he purchased a house and lot and moved to Hedrick, ·where he resided until his death in 1915. His son Harlan moved to the farm but the father spent much time in the summer for several years on the farm, driving in three miles daily in his buggy. He was an industrious and successful farmer, and when he retired to town life he was interested and active in the social, civic and the religious affairs of his town. He ,vas companionable, genial, and highly esteemed by all who knew him. His death, almost instantaneous vvith the fall, was the result of a faff from the second story FAMILY OF DAvrn Scorr balcony of the stock room or building at the Hedrick lumber yard on to a cement walk. It occurred on the last day of a reunion of his sons and families at his home in Hedrick. Only a couple of days before at the request of his sons he had purchased a choice piece of ground as the family lot in the Hedrick cemetery, had just driven out in the auto to show it, and returning stopped at the lumber yard, with the fatal result~ The funeral was largely attended) people coming in autos from miles around. V-1. Emmett Leon Scott· B-July 14, 1867, on the farm west of Hedrick, Iowa. D--- M-October 9, 1890, Highland Centei', Iowa. Jessie Florence Packwood B-February 2, 1870, Richland Center, Iowa. D-- Children: VI-1. Juanita Scott B-May 26, 1892, Hedrick, Iowa. D--- M--- VI-2. Paulina Scott B-August 12, 1895. D-- Juanita Scott attended University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wis. A bright, Christian girl, Methodist, well liked by all who knew htt . Paulina Scott attended West High School, Des Moines, and Business College, Des Moines, Iowa, and became a stenographer, a member of the M. E. church, was cheerful and winning in her way. V-1. Emmett Leon Scott was born on the ''home farm'' near Hedrick, where he grew to manhood. He attended country school, until grown, when he entered Iowa Wesleyan College (Mt. Pleasant) for a short course. September 5, 1890, he engaged in the furniture and undertaking busi­ ness in Hedrick, Iowa, where he continued until January, .1900, when he sold to his brother Leroy. He then moved to Ottumwa, Io~ra, taking charge of exclusive undertaking business until August, 1907, when he moved to Des. Moines, Iowa, and beca1ne a commercial traveler. In 1915 he purchased "the Home Farm" . near Hedrick, which he now owns. He resides at 1060 Thirty-fifth Street, Des Moines, Iowa. V-2. Harlan Alonso Scott B-December 28, 1869, on the farm three miles west of Hedrick, Iowa. D--- M-Decerober 21, 1893. Fremont, Iowa, at the home of the bride, by Rev. F. N. Byram, the bride's father. Myrtle Byram B-September 28, 1870, Minnesota. D_:_ -- Daughter of Rev. F. N. and Tabitha Byram, of Fremont, Iowa. V-2. Harlan Alonso Scott was born on the ''home farm'' near Hedrick, Iowa, attended country school, through the grades, then took a short course _in Penn college, Oskaloosa, Iowa. Emmett L. Scott

Back Row-Valetta F. Scott Emmett L. Scott R. Leroy Scott Paulina Scott Front Ro,v-Emily (Terrell) Scott J. Florence (Pacbvood) Scott Robert Orion Scott Juanita Scott

FAMILY OF DAVID ScoTT 37 - He returned to the farm until March, 1903, when he purchased and conducted a furniture and undertaking business at Union, Hardin county, Iowa, for two years. In 190 5 he moved to a farm of his own near Fremont, Iowa. In 1911 he again engaged in the furniture and undertaking business in Milton, Van .Buren county, Iowa, his present home . V-3. Robert Leroy Scott B-A.pril 11, 1872, on the home farm three miles west of Hedrick, Iowa. D--- M-December 24, 1896, by Rev. C.R. Norton, at Hedrick, Iowa. Emily.:. Terrell B-January 9, 1875, Martinsburg, Iowa. D--- Daughter of John and Elizabeth Terrell, of Hedrick, Iowa. Children: VI-1. Robert Orion Scott B-June 1, 1902, Hedrick, Iowa. D--- Vl-2. Valetta Florence Scott B-July 24, 1912, 1102 N. 21st Street, Boise, Idaho, weight 7½ pounds. D--- V-3. Robert Leroy Scott was educated in the country school, near the "home farm." In 1895 he entered the furniture and undertaking business in partnership with his brother, Emmett Leon, in Hedrick, Iowa. Later he purchased the entire stock and interest and continued the business until 1903, when he sold out. From 1903 to 1907 he was in the real estate business. From 1907 to the spring of 1910 he was on a farm six miles southeast of Ottum·wa, Iowa. This farm he exchanged for a hardware store and stock at Pleasantville, Iovva. This he later sold, and moved to Boise, Idaho, then to W eyburn, Canada, 1913, and again to Des Moines, _Iowa, 1915. He was successful in real estate deals, and now owns a good farm south of Des Moines. He is engaged as a commercial salesman. His residence is No. 1000 Twenty-ninth Street, Des Moines, low~. · IV-2. George Wilson Scott B-November 15, 1841, on his grandfather's farm, Guernsey county, Ohio. D--- M-December 27, 1868, by Rev. D. C. Smith. Hannah Rebecca Darner B--- D--·- Daughter of Joseph and Hetty A. Darner, of Wapello county, Iow·a. Adopted children: V-1. Alpheus Chauncey Scott B-January 31, 1872, Fremont, Iowa. D--- M-December -, 1894, Green county, Iowa. Nellie B. Underwood B--- D--- Daughter of Benjamin and May Underwood. VI-1. Hazel Audrey Scott B-July 29, 1869.. D--- FAMILY OF DAVID SCOTT

V-2. George William Darner B-February 14, 1871, Wapello county, Iowa. D--- M-March 14, 1897, Jamaica, Iowa. Liva Bell Graham B--­ D--- VI-1. Wilma Elvera Darner B-January 12, 1902. D--- IV-2. George Wilson Scott was born on his grandfather's· farm, up the creek from the stone bridge, Guernsey county, Ohio. When four years of age he became. lame and was compelled to use crutches until twenty years old. He lived with his parents in Cambridge and near Washington, Ohio, until October, 1856. The family then moved to Keokuk county, Iowa. After he was married he lived on a farm in Wapello county, Iowa, until 1875, when he moved to a farm in Green county, Iowa, and lived there until 1892, when he moved to Hedrick, Keokuk county, Iowa. In 1903 he moved to Des Moines, Iowa, and resides :at No. 1123 Twenty-fourth Street-a retired farmer's life. No children were born to them. but they adopted two boys, whom they have blessed and who have been a comfort and blessing to them. IV-3. Harriet Ann Scott B-May 10, 1844, Guernsey county, Ohio. D-April 11, 1882. BuriaJ was in Fremont cemetery, Fremont, Iowa. She had one _daughter, Blanche. IV -.4. Mary Eleanor (Scott) B-September 7, 1846, Guernsey county, Ohio. D--- M-November 1, 1866. Le,vis Beck B--- D-October 2, 1916, Wichita, Kan. Son of David and Mary Magdeline Beck, of Fremont, Iowa. V-1. Osco Beck B-November 24, 1867. V-2. Henry Elvian Beck B-October 23, 1869. V-3. Ralph D. Beck B-J une 11, 1875. IV-4. l'Aary Eleanor (Scott) Beck was born in Guernsey county, Ohio, and moved -w-ith her parents in 1856 to Keokuk county, Iowa, where she attended country school. After marriage she and her hus­ band lived on a farm near Fremont, Iowa, where they remained till the spring of 1874, when they moved to a farm near Albia, Monroe county, Iowa. In 1881 they moved to Republic county, Kansas, near the town of Bellville. In 1904 they moved to a farm near Cherokee, Alfalfa county, Oklahoma, and in 1908 to Wichita, Kansas, where they reside; occupation, farming. Emily (Terrell) Scott Robert Orion Scott Robert Leroy Scott Valetta Florence Scott

FAMILY OF DAVID ScoTT 39

V-1. Osco Beck B-November 24, 1867, Keok,lk county, Iowa, D--- ~.I-May 24, 1891. Ada L. Long B--­ D-December 13, 1901. Daughter of Elizar and Agnes M. Long, of Munden, Kansas. Children: VI-1. 1\-lary Eleanor Beck B-M·arch 13, 1892, Munden, Kansas. D--- Reside5 at the home of her father, near Cherokee, Alfalfa county, Oklahoma. VI-2. Frank A. Beck B-January 7, 1894. D--- Resides with his father . . VI-3. B:.irnes3 Olive Beck B-August 31, 1897, Axtel, Kansas. Resides with his father. M-January 10, 1909-bis second wife being Effie Adelia Ketterman, daughter of Daniel and W. A. Ketterman, Yewed, Oklahoma. · VI-4. vVynetta Beck B-October 27, 1915. V-1. Osco Beck attended country schools, living with his parents in lovva, Kansas and Oklahoma. He now resides on a farm, near Che!"okee, Alfalfa county, Oklahoma.

V-2. Henry Elvian Beck B-October 23, 1869, on a farm, Keokuk county, Iowa. D--- lvl-February 26, 1891, Maysville, Missouri. Flora Adella Roush · B--- D--- Daughter of Jacob M. and Louisa Roush, of Maysville, Missouri. Children: Vl-1. Lewis Jacob Beck B-April t, 1892, on a farm, Munden, Kansas. D--- M--- VI-2. Scott Wallace Beck B-March 9, 1894, on farm, Munden, Kans. D--- M--- VI-3. Percy D. Beck B-October 31, 1898, on farm, near Bellville, Kansas. D--- M--- Vl-4. Helen Eth~l Beck B-September 1, 1905, Lawrence, Kansas. D~-- FAMILY oF DAVID ScoTT

V-3. Ralph D. Beck B-June 11, 1875, on farm, Monroe county, Iowa. D--- M-August 4, 1896, Axtel, Kansas. Patience Layton B--­ D--- Daughter of Henry Clay and Margaret Ann Layton, of Axtel, Kansas. Children: VI-1. Leroy Layton Beck B-January 18, 1898, Axtel, Kansas .. D---· VI-2. Harry Lee Beck B-July 9, 1900, Courtland, :Kansas. . D-March 21, 1901, Courtland, Kansas. VI-3. Harley K. Beck B-December 8, 1903, Bellville, Kansas. D--- Vl-4. Margaret Estella Beck } t • • ste s VI-5. Jennie Marie Beck win 8 1 r B-August 29, 1906, Bellville, Kansas. D--- V-3. Ralph D. Beck attended country school while living with his parents in Iowa, Kansas and Oklahoma. He now resides on his farm in Alfalfa county, 0 klahoma. IV-5. 1\.1ilton Taylor Scott B-March 31, 1849, Guernsey county, Ohio. D--- M-December 27, 1883. Anna M. Patton B--­ D--- Daughter of John and Ruth Patton, near Anthony, Kansas. Children: V-1. Nellie M. Scott B-September 26, 1884, near Anthony, Kansas. D-September 3, 1885. V-2. Sylvia B. Scott B-February 18, 1886. D--- . M-December 23, 1906. John F. P. Werner, Jr. B--­ D--- Son of John F. P. and Linnie vVerner, near Helena, Oklahoma. Children: VI-1. Glenn Rosselas Werner B-October 6, 1907, Perdue, Okla.homa. D--- Vl-2. Velma Olive Werner B-December 31, 1909, Perdue, Oklahoma. D--- Vl-3. Robert Emerson Werner B-November 3, 1910. D--- FAMILY OF DAVID SCOTT

VI-4. Linnie May "Vv.,. erner B-July 4, 1914. D--,- V-3. Elsie B. Scott B-March 7, 1888, near Higgins, Texas. D--- M-June 17, 1907. George Melvin Pohlenz B--- D--- Son of August F. and Barbara E. Pohlenz, Alva, Okla. Children: VI-1. Floyd Milton Pohlenz B-August 24, 1908, Cherokee, Okla. D--- VI-2. Gaylord 1\1. Pohlenz B-June 4, 1914. D--- V-4. Walter M. Scott B-December 29, 1889, Anthony, Kansas. D--- M-November 10, 1908. Ellen Earl B--­ D--- Daughter of Irving and Frances Earl, Wood ward, Okla. Children: VI-1. Ira Ralph Scott B-August 17, 1909, Perdue, Okla. D--- Vl-2. Robert Milton Scott B-August 22, 1912. D--- Vl-3. Francis Marion Scott B-August 2, 1915. D---

V-5. Ralph P. Scott B-April 11, 1895, Anthony, Kan. D-l\1ay 29, 1896, Kansas City, Kan. IV-5. Milton Taylor Scott, in 1856, moved \Vith his parents from GuerI).sey county, Ohio, to Keokuk county, Iowa, and worked at farming until 1878, when he went to southwest Kansas, near Anthony, and took up government land-''a claim." In the spring of 1884 he began housekeeping on his farm, east of Anthony, ,vhere he lived t\VO years, engaged in farming and stock raising. In 1886 he moved to Scott county, Kansas, and lived eight months, then moved to Lipscomb county, Texas, where, for two and one-half years, he ·was engaged in farming and the dairy business on a small scale. In the fall of 1889 he moved back to Harper county, Kansas, and lived in Anthony six years, employed as stationary engineer. In the fall of 1895 he 1noved to Kan­ sas City, Kansas, and resided four years, and \-Vas employed at teaming. In September, 1900, he moved to Woods county, Oklahoma, where he rented and follnvved farming for three years. In April, 1903, he filed 42 FAMILY OF DAVID SCOTT on a claim in Woodbury county, Kan., and the following September moved to the ·claim, ,vhere. he lived six years, _engaged in farming and stock raising. Eighteen months of this time he ,vas also postmaster at Perdue, Okla. October 22, 1909, he moved to Mooreland, Kansas, and engaged in gardening and poultry raising. · V-2. Sylvia B. Scott and husband, John F. P. \Verner,. imme­ diately after marriage lived on a farm near Perdue, Woodward county, Okla., ,vhere he engaged also in stock raising. They now live on a farm near Helena, Alfalfa county, Okla. V-3. Elsie B. Scott lived two and one-half years in Cherokee, Oklahoma, ·where her husband was engaged in the grocery business. They now live on a farm near· Argonia, Kansas. V-4. Walter 1\1. Scott engaged in farming the first year after he was married, and lived in Perdue. They no,v live on her farm near Lathrop, Woodward county, Okla. IV-6. Sarah Annis Scott B-January 24, 1852, Cambridge, Ohio. D--- M-January 24, 1872, Keokuk county, Iowa. David Barnes B--­ D--- Son of Stephen and Sarah Barnes. Children: V-1. Sadie Barnes B-December 5, 1872. D-January 20, 1873. Burial was at Highland Center, Iowa. V-2. Charles H. Barnes B-May 3, 1874, Kirkville, Iowa. D--- M-May 3, 1904, St. Marys, Kansas. :Mary C. Snyder B--­ D---- Daughter of James H. and Charlott Snyder, St. l\fa.rys, Kan. Children: Vl-1. Harry Gilbert Barnes B-March 17, 1905, Axtell,-Kan. D--- VI-2. Harvey D. Barnes B-October 7, 1906, Colby, Kansas. D--- V-3. Floyd Leslie Barnes B-December 21, 1878, Butler, Iowa. D--- M-December 25, 1900, Mina, Kansas. Rachel E. Adams B--­ D--- Daughter of James and De:rlia J. Adams, :Mina, Kan. Child: Vl-1. Annis Marie Barnes B-November 23, 1902, Axtell, Kansas. D--- FAMILY OF DAVID ScoTT 43

IV-6. Sarah Annis (Scott) Barnes, ,vhen nvo years of age, moved with her parents from Guernsey county, Ohio, to Keokuk county, loYva, ·where she attended country school. After marriage she lived on a farm near Kirkville, Iowa, until 1879, vvhen they moved to a farm near Axtell, Kansas. March, 1907, they moved to Wichita, Kan., their present home. V-2. Charles H. Barnes attended college in Kansas City and Emporia, Kansas. On May 28, 1898, he enlisted in the 22nd Kansas Volunteers, served until October, and was discharged. He then took charge of the Business Department, as teacher, in the college at King­ fisher, Okla. He resigned March 2, 1899, and \Vith eight of his fellow students enlisted in Company 1\11, Sixth U. S. Infantry, and on May 2, 1899, sailed for the · Philippine Islands. He entered as a private, and on l\llay 2, 1902, he \Vas given a discharge as Sergeant Major, having served one year as chief clerk of Billibid Prison, Manilla, P. I. On July 11, 1903, he returned to his home. He and family resided in Cherokee, Okla., where he ·was in the real estate business. He later entered the ministry in the l\llethodist Episcopal church, and is sta­ tioned at Hennessey, Okla. V-3. Floyd Leslie Barnes attended college at Emporia, Kansas. Later he engaged in farming. He and \vif e are members of the· Baptist church, Lambert, 0 kla. IV-7. Charles vVilliam Alexander Scott B-March 22, 1855, Guernsey county, Ohio. D--- 1\1-May 10, 1882, Sigourney, Keokuk county, Io,va, by Rev. ,James Fry, Baptist. Catherine Akerman B-February 14, 1S63, Keokuk county, Iowa. D--- Daughter of John and Catherine (Lantz) Akerman, born in Bavaria, Germany. Resident then of Benton township, Keokuk county, Iowa. Children: Y-I. Harold Luain Scott V-2. Ralph Orion Scott V-3. Clarence Osco Scott V-4. Clifford Rex Scott V-1. Harold Luain Scott B-.July 1S. 1S83, Keokuk county, Iowa. D- ---- l\I-Novemher li, 190i, Burlington, Kansas. l\Iaud Stern B-Deeember 8, 188~, Liberty, 11o. D--- Daughter of \Villiam H. and Elizabeth Stern, of Burling· ton, Kan. Children: VI-1. ½~illiam Rov Scott B-August 3.~1909, Coffee county, Kansas. D--- Vl-2 .. Georgie Elizabeth Scott B-February 22, 1911, Coffee county, Kansas. D--- 44 FAMILY OF DAVID ScoTT

V-2. Ralph Orion Scott B-March 15, 1885, Green county, Iowa. D--- M-April 6, 1910, Garnett, Kansas. Bertha Lena Bause B-February 5, 1886, Cass county, Mo. D--.- . Daughter of Giles and Emma Bause. V-3. Clarence Osco Scott B-October 19, 1892, Adair county, Iowa. D--- M--- Clara Huguenot Children: VI-1. Juatiita Irene Scott VI-2. Keith :Scott V-4. Clifford Rex Scott B-August 8, 1895, Adair county, Iowa. IV-7. Charles William Alexander Scott, when one year old, moved with his parents from Guernsey county, Ohio, to Keokuk county, Iowa. Here he attended country school, and farmed. After he was mar­ ried, ·in the fall of 1883, he moved to Green county, Iowa, and in 1886 to Adair county, lo\va, and in 1906 to Leroy, Coffee county, Kansas. In all places farming was his occupation, in \vhich he \Vas successful and became one of Kansas' prosperous farmers, who also have their bank account. V-1. Harold Luain Scott moved with his parents to Green and Adair counties, Iowa, and to Coffee county, Kansas. Since his mar­ riage he resides on a farm at Westphalia, Kansas. V-2. Ralph Orion Scott attended country school in Coffee county, Kansas, having moved with his parents from Adair county, lo\va. He engaged in farming, and now resides in Westphalia, Kansas. V-3. Clarence Osco Scott \Vas born in Adair county, Iowa, and moved \Vith his parents to Leroy, Coffee county, Kansas. He at­ tended country schools in both states, and engaged in farming. His residence is Leroy, Coffee county, Kansas. V-4. Clifford Rex Scott was born in lo\va, and moved \Vith his parents and resides with them on the farm near Leroy, Coffee county, Kansas. IV-8. Nancy Elizabeth Scott B-February 18, 1859, Keokuk county, Iowa. D--- M-August 10, 1887. David Branson Patton B--- D--- Son of David and Mary Patton FAMILY OF DAVID ScoTT 45

Children: V-·-1. Earl Von Patton V-2. Lawrence Otto Patton V-3. Ross Ollis Patton V-1. Earl Von Patton B-June 22, 1888, Dighton, Kansas. D--- M-December 17, 1914. Ruby Ople Garrett B--­ D--- Child: VI-1. Harold· Sanford Patton B-December 26, 1915, D--- V-2. Lawrence Otto Patton B-June 12, 1892, Anthony, Kansas. D--- M-January 8, 1916. Atha Lucele Sutten B--- / D--- V-3. Ross Ollis Patton B-January 1S, 1894, Anthony, Kansas. D--- IV-8. Nancy Elizabeth (Scott) Patton lived at her home in Keokuk county, Iowa, and attended country school until the fall of 1884, \Vhen she went to the home of her sister, Mrs. Annis Barnes, Marshall county, Kansas, for a short time. She then went to Republic county, Kansas, to another sister, Mrs. lvlary E. Beck, where she lived for one year and \Vorked as seamstress. In 1885 she ,vent to Harper county, Kansas, and with her brother, Milton T. Scott, and family, traveled, by \vagon, tvvo hundred miles to Scott county, Kansas, to take up land by government claims, and filed on a pre-emption adjoining Milton T. Scott's homestead. After her marriage in 188i to Mr. Pat­ ton they continued on the claim they proved up on until 1889, when it ,vas sold and they returned to Harper county, Kansas, where they lived four years. September 16, 1893, they located on land three miles ivest of Helena, Okla., in the '' Cherokee Strip.'' · In 1903 a railroad ,vas built across this farm, and in 1904 they sold it and located ,vhere they novv reside, on a farm four miles south of Cherokee, Okla. V-1. Earl Von Patton attended country schJol, then became a farmer. V-2. La,vrence Otto Patton obtained a country school education and engaged in farming. V-3. Ross Ollis Patton, after attending the country schools, joined his father on the farm. IV-9. Albert Ross Scott B-April 23, 1861, I~eokuk county, Iowa. D-January 8, 1866, of fever. Burial was in cemetery at Fremont, Iowa. FAMILY OF GEORGE 1\1. Sc OTT

GEORGE McCULLOCH SCOTT III-5. George lvicCulloch Scott B-August 27, 1820, Washington county, Pa. D-July 25, 1908, Ottumwa, Iowa. M-May 4, 1847-home of the bride's parents, I\1arshfield, Athens county, Ohio­ "old homestea.d"-Rev. W.W. Tipton, officiating, to Hadassah Jefferson Cotton B-May 19, 1825, Marshfield, Athens county, Ohio. D-January 7, 1911, Ottumwa, Iowa. Children: IV-1. Emma Hadassah Scott B-April 30, 1848. D-January 13, 1863, typhoid fever, Cardington, Ohio. IV-2. Infant son, --Scott Born and Died-July 27, 1850. IV-3. Orion Cotton Scott IV-4. Cleland McCulloch Scott IV-5. l\1ary Blanche Scott IV-6. Flora Dale Scott IV-7. John Albert Scott III-5. Rev. George McCulloch Scott was born in Guernsey county, Ohio, and died at his home, 259 South Ransom Street, Ot­ tumvva, Iovva, aged 87 years, 10 months, 28 days. He ,vent \vith his parents on their return to Washington county, Pa. There he vvas converted at the age of fourteen, at Bethel church, not far from the farm of his grandfather, and under the pastorate of Rev. John Clark. . He vvas united in marriage, at l\tiarshfi.eld, Athens county, Ohio, to . Hadassah Jefferson Cotton, who shared life's experiences with him sixty-one years and survived him three and one-half years. He ,vas licensed to preach in January, 1844, received into the Mus­ kingum Annual Conference, Methodist Protestant church, in Sep­ tember, 1844, and appointed assistant for one year to Rev. Jacob Nichols, on l\1t. Pleasant circuit. He also taught school and "boarded around'' during his early ministerial life. Among the circuits he served are Colu1nbia, ·with Rev. \V. W. Tipton; Sandusky, ,:vith Rev. Israel Th rap; Columbia, with Rev. Simon Elliott; Morganville, two years; Belmont, two years; Cambridge, two years, during which time nvo churches \Vere built; Pisgah, three years, vvhen two churches vvere built; Belmont, McConnelsville, Cardington, Springfield, Delaware, Ohio. i' While stationed as pastor of the Methodist Protestant church in Cardington, Morrovv county, Ohio, he enlisted, August 7, 1862, as private in the civil \Var, to go ,vith a company of young men of the to,vn, in Company C, 96th 0. V. I. In lviay, 1863, he vvas made Orderly (or First) Sergeant. In June, 1863, he \Vas, by vote of the regiment, elected, and by the government co1nmissioned Chaplain of the 96th Ohio Volunteer Infantry. This regiment ivas in the Army of the Mississippi and Gulf, served under both General W. T. Sherman and General U. S. Grant, and Rev. George l\I. Scott Hadassah J. (Cotton) Scott 1820-1908 1825-1911

01ion C. Scott, A. M. :Vlary (Flagler) Scott

F AMIL y OF GEORGE M. SCOTT 47 among the more important. battles or engagements, not to name the m~ny lesser ones, are Arkansas Post, Ark., Vicksburg, l\!1illiken' s Bend, Jackson, Miss., l\llatagorday, Tex., Nevv Orleans, La., Forts Gaines and Morgan, lVIobile. At the battle of Sabine Cross Roads, on the Red River expedition, he was made a prisoner along with the hospital corps, and for three months he was confined in l\llansfi.eld (La.) prison. Here he had a sad experi..:. ence in a servic_e of love. Captain Samuel Coulter, of Compan·y E, from Marion county, Ohio, one of his companions in. prison:, had re­ ceived a wound in the knee from a minnie ball. Amputation ,vas nec­ essary just above the knee. This \Vas not a success and a second ampu­ tation was made, this time up near to the body. The artery again broke. Chaplain. Scott, who ~ad attended him closely from the hour of their in­ carceration, hearing a vveak moan and the gurgling of the artery, applied his thumb to the artery. As Christian brothers-for Captain Coulter, too, "' as an ordained minister-they avvaited in prayer and in conversa­ tion about the loved ones at home, the ,vhite winged messenger. This was on the night of April 28, 1864. Captain Coulter' s watch and other keepsakes were then taken, as requested by the dieing comrade, and a year later on return north delivered by Chaplain Scott to the vvidow. He ·was paroled June 1, 1864, and joined his regiment. December 15, 1864, he ,vas discharged, on account of illness, the gov­ ernment apparently preferring to have him die at home than in the southland. Through careful nursing by his vvife and treatment of skillful doctors he s_o far recovered as to be able to again take up the \York of the min­ istry. In October, 1865, he moved his family to Tipton, Cedar county, Iowa, having the previous month joined the- lo\va conference and been assigned to Tipton circuit. In Iovva he served the f ollovving charges: Tipton, lv1arshalltown, Bangor, State Center, Osceola, South Prairie near West Liberty, Attica, l\ililton, Hixson Grove, N evv London, Kes­ \Yick, Bass Lake, rv1inn., and 1'fount Zion. He then settled in Ottum­ ,va, organized a church and for a time was its pastor, and later served as supernumerary assistant to the pastor of this church. He served in all, sixty-nine years as a minister of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. He was an even-tempered, thoughtful, and serious man, though in his family genial, happy-spirited, and even jovial. He made chums of his boys, and with them ,vent swimming, hunting, and fishing. They gladly took turns during school vacation to accompany their father on his trips over the circuit, or to a vvedding miles distant in the country. The last ten years of his life he had his second eyesight and read ,:vithout glasses. Though not a voluminous reader he read vvith care and thought, and kept abreast the history of his time and in touch vvith the spirit of the day. He was in full possession of his mental powers almost to the last. He \Vas as strong an advocate of prohibition as he had been against slavery. The vvriter remembers at the age of seven years, that one FAMILY OF GEORGE M. ScoTT night, after a distinctive knock had been made at the front door, going outdoors with his father to admit to the barn loft a wagon load (five) of fugitive slaves on their way to Canada, and two nights later seeing them, well provided with food and hidden under a load of straw, start north-· ward from Cardington in the· care of another conductor of the ''Under­ ground Railway''. Not till in after years did the writer understand the real import of his father's anxious care for the little black girl, her pa­ rents, and two brothers of the mother, when he realized his father had been a station agent in the historic ''Underground Railway'', much used, and among ardent anti-slavery people quite popular, in the fifties, prior to the civil war. He had, after reaching three score years and ten, two strokes of paralysis, but with prompt medical aid soon recovered. A third in the early eighties required him to use a cane. The night of July 23, 1908, though feeble, he retired as usual, bade good night, turned over in bed and went to sleep, from which he never awoke till he woke in the Glory Land, his spirit taking its flight the night of the 25th. The funeral services were held at the home, conducted by Rev. J. C. Nutt, president of Iowa conference, M. P. church, assisted by Rev. D. C. Smith of the M. E. church, and Reverends Lindsay and Zica­ foose of the Congregational church. All the members of his family were present. Interment was in the family lot in the Ottumwa, Iowa, cemetery, where the family monument and a U. S. Government head­ stone mark the resting place of his mortal remains. THE COTTON AND 'CLELAND FAMILIES 49

Ruth Arnold I f 1. Eliza Cotton B- D-1818 M-1815 l l b Apr. 21, 1816 d Aug. 12, 18i9 } 111 John Bozman 1. Betsy Cotton 2. Ruth Arnold Cotton ' B-Sep, 15, 1779 b Jany, 8, 1818 d- m Isaac Chapm~m · The Colton Family II 12. D.William Cotton Five Brothers: B-Jany. 3, 1781 1. James Cotton D--- · r l. James Acha.son Gesnor Cotton I 3. Mary Cotton l b Jany. 22, 1824 d June 21 1849 B-Dec. 25, 1749 1 D-Feb. 20, 1806 - B-June 1, 1784 I cholera, Cincinnati, Ohi~. ' Born in Belfast, Ireland. D--- 2. Hadassah Jefferson Cotton 1769 came to America and 1813 ~iarried a Mr. Stull m George l\L Scott - See Scott settled on a farm near , 4. James Cotton I family record. Princeton, N.J. Helped to B-Dec. 16, 1787 I 3. Cleopatra Cotton bury the dead after famous D b Mar. 28, 1828, Athens Co., Ohio battle of Princeton. 1797 5. Richard Cotton j I d Aug. 12, 1899, Wilton, Iowa moved with. his family to m Mar. 12, 1850 Green county, Pa., and re­ 1 B-Nov. 2, 1789 Isaac Newton Gabriel m?,ined there till his death. ·I b Apr. 30, 1822, Athens Co., I D-Robert Hutchi·nson d Mar. 26, 1873, Wilton Iowao. Killed by a falling tree. 6. One of three brothers to Cotton 1 4. Winfield Scott Cotton' escape impressment to B-March 29, 1792, in John- . b June 6, 1830 d Apr. 9,.).892 serve on British ships. son county, N. J. L (No record) Others taken to Spain and D-Sep. 17, 1862, killed by 5• uzerne Cotton never heard from. lightning. . · b July 14, 1833 d- M--- M--- Marshfield, Ath- , m Mary Ann Dwigans Achsah-­ ens county, Ohio. Owned i m Alice F. Wildman a sickle factory on Island 116. Return Jonathan Cotton B-April 13, 1759 creek, above Steubenville b July 14, 1833, Jefferson Co., O. D-Sept. 5, 1850 Ohio. ' m Margaret A Clutter l\lary Stull (sister) D-1813 7. Nancy Cotton 11 b Nov. 14, 1843, Athens Co., O. B-Oct. 30, 1794 7. Virginia Dunreath Cotton 2. John Cotton b June 2, 1836 m James Love D--- j (No children) 3. William Cotton 8. Jane Cotton 8. Horatio Mortimer Cotton B-July 25, 1797 b Mar. 20, 1838, Marshfield, Ohio 4; Richard Cotton D--- m Apr. 29. 1867, near Marshfield, 3. Robert Cotton Ohio, to Nancy Withers b Nov. 17, 1846, Marshfield, 0. 9. Warren V. Cotton 1.Joh~ Cleland ( 1. John b Aug. 20, 1840, Athens Co., 0. d Sept. 14, 1893, Ames, Cloud Co., Jane Carr ) 2. James Kans. I2. William Cleland m Apr. 4, 1869, Marshfield, 0. 3. Arthur Cleland John Sarah Herron · . . M--.- tl. l dJuly It>, 1878, Marshfield, O. Jane Clark 2. James I m Nov. 27, 1879, Marshfield O. 4. Nancy Cleland }Several Jane Catherine Ferguson ' The Cleland Family M--- children, d Apr. 10. 1891, Rollo Co., Mo. James Woods unknown 1 l 10. Mary M. Cotton James Cleland 6."Blanche Carlile Cleland J b Nov. 29. 1843, Marshfield, 0. (Scotch Presbyterian) B-March 30, 1798, Belfast, m Sep. 24, 1867, Marshfield, 0., A freeholder, owned his Province of Ulster Ireland by Rev. Pratt, to Parish of Killala: County Henry Baker ster. Ireland. A linen j Down. b Oct. 31, 1841, near Athens, O. bleacher and weaver. D-Dec. 20, 1865, Marshfield, Son of Jacob and Ruth (Rey- Owned la r g e · bleaching Athens county, Ohio. nolds) Baker. Co. D, 75th grounds. l M-Feb. 14, 1823 Regt. O.V.I., Oct. 1861 to May- She s~iled from Belfrst, Ire- 1861. Address, Albany, Ohio land, with her father's family Mrs. Mary (Carlile) I May 14, 1819, and landed July 1. Margaret Browning Montgomery I 14, 1819, at Cape May, N.J., at m On Island creek, W. Va. theentranceintoDelaware bay --, M. D. (Mr. Montgomery lived 5 M Cl I d 2. Clefo.nd Browning but one year after his mar­ · ary e an J Lived on a farm near Steuben- riage with Mary Carlile. M -- r ville, 0., on the Virginia side Two years later she was · John Fletcher Browning \ of the Ohio River. married to James Cleland) l 3. Mary Browning 7. Jane Cleland 4. Jane Browning D -- (in childbirth) M--- 1J Samuel Ramsey William Ramsay J I M-Jane Shaw

Note-The widow of James Cotton had her sons apprenticed and they learned the steel cutting trade, as the making of sickles, scythes, etc. THE COTTON AND CLELAND FAMILIES

/1. John Bozman f 1. Anna Bane Gabriel · Eliza 2. Mary Bozman · } b July 18, 1878, Wilton, Ia. 1. Florence Elizabeth Smith Cotton 3. Harriet Bozman d 1879, Geneva, Nebr. b Feb. 4, 1909, Chicago m Wm. Teenan and 4. Wm. Bozman 2. Paul Sloan Gabriel 2. Elinor Catherine Smith b Feb. 18, 1880 b Jany 1910 Chica(Yo John Bozman, {5. Beverly \\a ugh Bozman d July 19, 1882 ., ' . "". · 3. Florence Sabina Gabriel } 3. Charles Gabriel S~nth f 1. Ernesti Gabriel b June 19, 1887, Elmwood,Ill. b Nov. 30, 1913, Chicago b Apr. 6, 1851 m Jany. 5, 1876 m Nov. 7, 1907 l4. Mary Louise Smith } Alex Smith · b June 20, 1915, St. Paul, Minn. Vinnie H. l\L Sloan 4. Elgi-va· Marie Gabriel b June 4, 1854 b Mar. 3, 1890, Elmwood, Ill. 1. Grove Hill, Jr. d Sept. 26, 1906 , m April 6, 1910, Chicago } { b 1913, Pasadena, Calif. Grove Hill · · 3.Cleopatra l 2. Jane Gabriel Faye Cleopatra Dunkle Cotton ) b Aug. 23, 1852,Athens Co.,O. }{1. b Nov. 30, 1877, Glidden, Ia. and m Feb. 25, 1875,Cedar Co.,Ia. 2. Warren Gabriel Dunkle Isaac Newton by Rev. A. G. Martyn b Oct.18.1886, Glidden, Ia. Gabriel .Dr. Sam'l. C. Dunkle m Aug. 6, 1911, Sioux City b Jany. 1, 1847, Pennsylvania,. Florence Christine Lambert d Sept. 11, 1913, Rochester, I Minn. f 1. Daughter band d 1875 2. Harry Talmage Hedges . b Oct. 17, 1876, Durant, Ia. l{ I m Sept. 9, 1901, by Rev. A. 1. George Henry Hedges G. Martyn b Oct. 1, 1905, Cedar Rapids 13. Mary Dunre,ath Gabriel Fanny M. Besler Iowa b Oct. 10, 1854 .} b Oc,t. 29, 1878 m Sept. 9, 1874 3. Charles David Hedges I Geo. T. Hedges b 1878 d 1879 b Dec. 19, 1851 G. T. Hedges & Co., Real 4. Infant Daughter I Estate, Cedar Rapids, Ia. band d 1880 5. Nellie Cleopatra Hedges 1 b Sep. 3, 1881, Geneva, Nebr. {J, Margaret Josephine Peddie I m_Sept. 29, 1903, Cedar Rap- b Ma_y 10, 1908 · ids, Ia. A. Franklin Peddie I l b May 15, 1881 · 6. Horace Gabriel Hedges } · I b Feb. 14, 1888, Cedar Rap- · ids, Ia. .. 1, David Talmage Hedges m Sept. 9, 1911,Lake OkoboJ1, .{. b Aug. 8, 1912, Ctdar Rapids I Ia. by Rev. A. G. Martyn ' Coleen Dh:::m Johnson I b Jany. 13, 1892 II 4. CharlP.s Hutchiso.·n Ga.briel r1. Vera Gwendolen_ Gabriel ~ { 1. George Henry Sherwood b Aug., 1856, Cedar Co., Ia. 1J b Aug. 7, 1877, Wilton, Ia. m Apr. 26, 1876, \Yalnut, Ia. ll m Harry Sherwood Francilla I. Woodhouse d July, 1902 b Dec. 2, 1854 (Divorced) m Wm. Matthews m Mar. 28, 1889, San Fran- { 1. Charles Hutchison, Gabriel, cisco, Calif. 1 1 Jr. · Amelia Moore J l b l\Jar. 2, 1892, San Francisco Calif. 5. Melita Gabriel b Jany. 2, 1859, Wilton, Ia., farm m Dec. 3, 1883, Glidden, Ia., Thos. R. Rich f 1. Walter Newton Gabriel, A. · b Feb. 19, 1852, Como, Ill. B., Berkeley, Calif., Univ. 1. Eleanore band d 1910 b Au . 23, 1855, Glidden, Ia. 2. Barbara, 1b July 16, 1911 6. Horatio Mortimer Gabriel b Oct. 28, 1860 Etnma Morris · d Sept. 26, 1905 b Aug. 14, 1885, Paris, Ky. m April 5, 1885 2. Arthur Corydon Gabriel } fl- Evelyn Dorothy Gabriel Ella Bell Stevens 1 b May 7, 1889, Glidden, Ia. b Dec. 2, 1912 b May 16, 1862 m Dec. 26, 1911 ) 2. Douglas Corydon Gabriel l Evelyn Dunbar t b Jany. 13, 1915 7. Elgiva May Gabriel' . 1. Leo Gabriel Harris b April 18, 1863 } ~ b June 1,1894,Sharon Springs, m Sept. 7, 1887, Wilton, Ia. William Dorwart Harris . Kans. . Banker, Wilton, Iowa 8. Nellie Marina Bane Gabriel Chas. H. Grbriel resides at b Apr. 12, 1868 133 Keystone Ave., River For~ m Oct. 14, 1891, Cedar Rap­ est, s. suburb of Chicago. He ids, Ia. is a music writer and pub~ Samuel Lee Kay. Residence lisher, and author of "The Little Rock, Ark. Glory Song". THE COTTON AND CLELAND FAMILIES 51 ( 1. AlonzoA.Cotton,A.B., M.D.} p. Earl Lyon Cotton · b Oct. 28, 1861, Cedar Co.,Ia. ~ 2. Car] Cotton - m Sept. 26, 1887, Metz, Ia, 3. Schuyler 0. Cotton May Eugenia Lyon, M. D., 4. Mary G. Cotton Res. Vermillion, s; D. 5. Daniel L. Cotton _ S. U., Iowa. 7. Cornelia May Cotton b Apr. 13, 1864, Iowa f 1, Grace Fredonia Cotton d 1903, Colorado ~ 2. Amy Dorothy Cotton m Sept. 24, 1891 l 3. Clarence Constance Cotton 5. Luzerne Cotton Grace A. Pomeroy 4. Hiram Luzerne Cotton 3. Frank Cotton (No record. · and } b Dec. 11, 1867 Mary Ann Dwigans Engineer on Panama canal) , 4. Jennie Pearl Cotton } ( 1. Verne William Wild an I b May 15, 1872 Cl · Ad - m m Nov. 13 1890 i 2. ance . ene_W1 1dman ur·11·n 1 1am M'. W'ld1 man l 3. Mary Allee Wildman 5. Blanche E. Cotton b Apr. 2, 1876 d Sept., 1876 6. Stella May Cotton l b July 29, 1879 Charles Jesse Huskey m Dec. 14; 1906 . · Chas. J. Huskey ( 1. George B. Cotton band d 1864 2. Atchison Gesnor Cotton 6. Return Jonathan b Oct. 18, 1867 · } { 1. Eva Margaret COtton m Apr. 14, 1895 Cotton Mary E. Bell . and } 3. Shiras Ainsley Cotton Margaret A. Clutter b 1870 d 1902 l4.-Luzerne E. Cotton b 1876 d 1911 ( 1. Emmett Cotton b Feb. 27, l86S, Marshfield,O. m Oct. 1, 1901, Athens, 0. I Bell Hooper 2. Ora Cotton b Aug. 27, 1869 1 m Sept. 19, 1897 . Dr. John L. Henry 7. Horatio Mortimer 1 3. Lonnie Cotton Cotton ~ b Aug. 19, 1871,Marshfield,O. and } · 14· Ernest Lester Cotton Nancy Withers b Sept. 10, 1873, Marsh:fiield, Ohio d Date not known· 5. Thomas Arnold Cotton b Oct. 21, 1875, Marshfield_.O, I m June 26, 1912 MabelStewart,Canisteo,N.Y. l 6. Henry Baker Cotton b Mar. 12, 1878 d Date not known (1. Leona Mabel Cotton }{1. Robert Cleland Freeborn 9. Warren V. Cotton b :Viar. 12, 1870, Ohio b June 29, 1896 I m Feh.1.6,1893, Rol.ls Co.,Mo. 2. Warren Sheldon Freeborn and ~ Joseph Sheldon Freeborn b May 20, 1902 Sarah Herron } l 2. Cleland Albertus Cotton b 1874 d May 20, 1902

( 1. Blanche E. Baker ) { 1. L. Faye Cline b Sep. 19, 1868 ~ b June 19, 1891, Meigs Co.,O. m Sept. 19, 1887 Gra~uate Ohio State Uni­ J. Everett Cline f versity, 1914 b Sept. 26, 1859 2. Hazel B Cline I 0. Mary M. Cotton Address, Albany, Ohio b Nov. 17, 1895 end } 2. Maude R. L. Baker Graduate Ohio State Uni­ He.1ry Baker b Nov. 28, 1873 versity, 1916 1 d July 27, 1875 3. Emel Chalmers Baker b Apr. 24, 1876 1 d March 14, 1877 L4. Faye A. Baker b May 30, 1879 Gra

Hadassah J. ( Cotton) Scott, faithful wife of George McCulloch Scott, shared with him the hardships, trials, joys, and triumphs of the circuit _rider, and cared for the children during his absence in the service of his country during the civil war. In 1865 they 1noved from Cardington, Ohio, to Tipton, Cedar county, Iowa, Rev. Scott having joined the North Iowa conference of the lvlethodist Protestant church. He held severt:1.l desirable pastorates during the next forty years, and she was his efficient helpmeet. She survived him two years. She was born on Island Creek near Steubenville, Jeffer'son county, Ohio, and died at her home in Ottumwa, Iowa, aged 85 years, 7 months, 18 days.. She was the mother of seven children, five of whom survived her, and were present at the funeral. In 1840 her parents moved to Athens county, Ohio. She attended the Athen_s Female Seminary, and for two years was a teacher. At the age of nineteen she was· converted and joined the Methodist Protestant church. The Methodist Recorder of Pittsburgh, Pa., for January 21, 1911, says: - "She was a most devoted wife and mother, intensely loyal to her family and her church. She reared a family of children of ·which any mother could be proud, and she was a mother well deserving the love and respect and painstaking care given her during her last days by her children, especially John and Blanche, who sacrificed personal ambition to stay at home and care for father and mother. "Funeral services were conducted at the home January 10, 1911, by Rev. J. C. Nutt, President of the Iowa Conference, M. P. Church, assisted by Rev. D. C. Smith of the Methodist· Episcopal Church, and Rev. Wm. Spiker of the Congregational Church. "Her remains were laid to rest by the side of those of her husband in the family lot in the beautifnl Ottum·wa cemetery."

IV-5. Mary Blanche Scott B-Nov. 15, 1857, McConnellsville, Ohio She received her education in the public schools of Tipton, Ce­ dar county, Iowa; Marshalltown and State Center, l\iarshall county, Iowa; Osceola, Clarke county, Iowa; and the State Uni­ versity, ·where she completed the Junior year. She taught, first, in the district schools, then in the public schools of Attica, Mil­ ton, Oskaloosa, and Ottumwa, Iowa, and seven years in the pub­ lic schools of Canon City, Colorado. She then ,vent to Ottumwa, Iowa, to be ·with her aged parents, whom she lovingly and tenderly cared for during their declining years. She makes her home with her sister Flora, Mrs. Wm. Town­ send, 429 South Ransom Street, Ottumwa, Iowa, ,vhere both are active in the South Side Congregational church, of ,vhich they are faithful members. Cleland l\1. Scott, wife, Cora G. (Atherton) J obn Albert Scott Scott, granddaughter Claudia G. Evans 1868-1911

Mary Blanche Scott Flora D. (Scott) Townsend Children of Rev. and l\Irs. Geo. l\1. Scott

F AMIL y OF GEORGE j\l. SCOTT 53 lV-6. Flora Dale Scott B-Jtily 2, 186C\ Cardington, Morrow County, Ohio D--- M-Aug. 15, 1882, Attica, Iowa, Rev. C. H. Montgomery officiating Leander A. Hollowell V-.1. Leroy Hollo,vell, son B-March 4, 1884 D-Feb. 8, 1893, Diphtheria Oct. 26, 1885, granted a divorce from L. A. Hollowell on Scriptural grounds (adultery) and given custody and control of her son, Leroy. M-July 18, 1893, at the home of her father in Wapello County, Iowa, Rev. G. M. Scott offiriating William H. Townsend B-April 27, 1843, ~Iaysville, Ky. Came to Iowa in 1844 IV-7. John Albert Scott B-Nov .. 10, 1868, Tipton, Cedar County, Iowa D-J une 7, 1911, Ottumwa, Iowa He completP.d his sophomore year in Adrian College in 1890. His health failing he ,vent to Canon City, Colo., where he so much improved that he taught several years in the Canon City high school. He spent one winter in Southern Pines, N. Car., and one in San Antonio, Tex., and a few months in Phoenix, Ariz. He found no place better than home, where he spent the last six years of his llfe. Coming· into the home from transacting a business deal down. to,vn, he said to his sister, ~'I feel very ,veary, do not go out". ·Later he called her to his room and saying "Goodbye, Sister", passed over to join his mother and father. His death ,vas due to hemorrhage of the lungs. Genealogical Chart of the Grandchildren of Orion Cotton Scott and Mary (Flagler) Scott William (?) Scott 1 Stephen Willard Wilma Millar Corwin 1. Mary Jane Scott Charles Scott Corwin·. Mich., Philippine Is-} Columbus, Ohio and J 1751-1840 Mich., Iowa, Calif. } { lands, Calif. 2. Helen Seott Ulster, Ireland Charles Scott Jane Letitia Millar Manila, P. I. Pennsylvania } 1786-1857 · Mich., Iowa, Calif. · .3. Harold Orion Scott. Annis (Porter) Ulster, Ireland Rev. George McCul- 1 Jr., Camp l\iethley, 1752_.:.1883 Pennsylvania } loch Scott ( 1. Harold Orion Scott •' Mindanao, P. I. . George McCullough Susan McCulloch 1820-1908 · Iowa, :Manila, Cebu, 4. Wilma Fl1.1,gler Scott 1763-1836 1796-1855 Ohio, Pa., Iowa · . Philippine Isl., Calif. Presidio of Monte~ Margaret (Wilson) W. Va.-Ohio rey, Culif. 1775-1837 ~ Orion Cotton Scott James Cotton Ohio, Iowa, Illinois 1 1749-1806 Robert-Hutchison England Cotton 2. Mabel Emma Scott ( New Jersey 1792-1862 Iowa, Ohio, Illinois Achsah (--) Va., N. J., Ohio Hadassah Jefferson 1750-1850 l Cotton James Cleland } Marshfield, Athens · Mary Eleanor Adarn~ Belfast, Ireland. (A County, Ohio freeholder). Owned · BlancheCarlileCleland ~ Chicago, III. large linen bleaching Belfast, Antrim Co., grounds. Prov. of Ulster, Ire., Joseph Samuel Adams} :Mrs. Mary (Carlile) Athens Co., Ohio England, Montgomery Eleanor Sarah Tylar . Gordon Charles John Flagler England, China Adams, M. D. l James Flagler I China, Mass., Ill. J erusha Baker ) Now York Residence, Qhicago New York Thomas Flagler ) } N. Y .,Mich., Md.,Ia. ______} Viney Hall Samuel Jones Mary Fluglcr Daniel Guernsey l and New York, Mich.; } New York } John Guernsey Iowa, Illinois· · a. Ralph Cleland Scott Rachael Jones I I Iowa, !\1 ass., Ill. l ------lRachcl MaryGuernscy J I Buenos Aires, Argen- Henry Bolton New York 1 tina; Montevideo, f · Urug.uay; Santiago, Jenn Flagler Scott and Henry Bolton , } ~ Nancy Bolton George Alexander , ·1 Chile, 8. A. General I Mass., Ill., South Hanna Spate New York , New York Dupuy Secretary, ~.M.C.A. j America Margaret LeTour B-March 4, 1858 William McKendree St. Clair Co., Ill. Joseph Dupuy } Joseph Nichols Dupuy Dupuy Jles. 4526 N. Paulina - GenevieveElsie Dupuy Georgia Joseph Dupuy, Jr. } B--Jany. 18, 1800 ( B-July 17, 1835 . St., Chicago. Judge · Ill., Mass:, South and B-March 12, 1776 Wilkes Co., Ga. St. Clair Co., Ills. } of Superior Court, America Wilkes Co., Ga. Elizabeth Ford Cook Co., Ill., 1904- 1910 . Rev. John Van Pelt Mary Lenore VnnPelt 4. Bertha Mary Scott Kentucky B-Aug. 13, 1860 Ia., Mass., Mich.,111 Mary Elizabeth Wight } Shelby Co., Ky. Harold 0. Scott, D. D. S. Ralph C. Scott, A. B., B. D. Dental Surgeon, U. S. A.

Mrs. Mabel E. (Scott) Adams, R. N. Bertha Mary Scott Children of l\!r. and Mrs. Orion C. Scott

Orion Cotton S~ott IV-3. Orion Cotton Scott B-July 14, 1851, Belmont, Ohio D- M-June 26, 1879, , Poweshiek Co., Iowa, Prof. S. N. Fellows, D. D., of the State University of Iowa, and the groom's father, Rev. Geo. M. Scott, of Iowa City, officiating, at the home of the bride's sister, Dr. and Mrs. W. G. Millar Mary Flagler B-Nov. 16, 1850, Royalton, Niagara Co .• New York D- . Children~- V-1. Harold Orion Scott V-2. Mabel Emma Scott V-3. Ralph Cleland Scott V-4. Bertha Mary Scott V-1. Harold Orion Scott, Dental Surgeon U. S. A. B-Sept .. 15, 1880, Tipton, Cedar Co., Ia. D- M-Dec. 1, 1909, Glendale, Los.Angeles Co., Calif., Rev. J. F. Humphrey . pastor First M. E. Church, Glendale, officiating Wilma Millar Corwin B-1\I arch 8, 1882, Brooklyn, Iowa D- .Children: . VI-1. Mary Jane Scott B - Sept. 12, 1910, in Columbus, Ohio D- VI-2. Helen Scott B-Sep. 16, 1911, in Manila, Philippine Islands D- Vl-3. Harold Orion Scott, Jr. B-Dec. 2, 1912, in Camp Keithley, Moro Province, Island of Mindanao, Philippine Islands D- Vl-4. v\t"'ilma Flagler Scott B-l\lay 16, 1915, Presideo of Monterey, Calif. D- V-2. Mabel Emma Scott B-June 17, 1884, Oskaloosa, Iowa. D- . M-Dec. 24, 1914, Berwyn, Cook Co., Ill., Rev. Charles Gilkie,_ D. D., pastor Hyde Park (Chicago) Baptist church, officiating Gordon Charles Adams, M. D. B-Jany.-14, 1889, Kinwba, China D- . Residence Chicago, Ill. VI-1. Mary Eleanor Adams B-Dec. 3,, 1916, Chicago, Ill. V-3. Ralph Cleland Scott B-Nov. 3. 1885, Oskaloosa, Iowa D- . M-June 4, 1914, 4526 N. Paulina St., Ravenswood, Chicago, Rev. James C. Baker, D. D., pastor Trinity M. E. Church, Champaign-Urbana, Ill., officiating Genevieve Elsie Dupuy B-Feb. 9, 1891, 4526 N. Paulina St., Ravenswood, Chicago VI-i. Jean Flagler Scott B-Nov. 24, 1915, Boston, Mass. V-4. Bertha Mary Scott B-Feb. 27, 1887, Oskaloosa, Iowa D- 56 FAMILY OF ORION CoTTON ScoTT

IV-4. Cleland McCulloch Scott B-Feb. 27, 1854, Senecaville, Guernsey Co., Ohio D- M-May 5, 1880, Knoxville, Iowa, Rev. Joseph H. Marshall, pastor Presbyterian church, Knoxville, officiating Cora Gertrude Atherton B-Oct. 11, 1861, Shady Grove, Franklin Co., Pa. D- V-1. Claudia Gertrude Scott B-May 13, 1882, Knoxville, Marion Co., Iowa D- M-Dec. 26, 1908, Council Bluffs, Iowa, Rev. John M. Jones, rector St. Paul's Episcopal Church, Council Bluffs, officiating Divorced-Oct, 6, 1911 . Henry B. Evans · B-Jany. 2, 1883, Middletown, Ohio D- Vl-1. Claudia Elizabeth Scott Evans B-Nov. 19, 1909, Council Bluffs, Iowa D- Orion Cotton Scott was a child of the manse, in Belmont, Belmont coun_ty, Ohio, in 1851. . He first attended school in l\1cConnellsville, Morgan county, Ohio -a subscription school conducted by a Quakeress maiden. The second school attended \-Vas the primary in the same town, and he had as his teacher Lucy, the daughter of the author of that famous old · series of readers, The McGuffey Readers. He attended the schools of Cardington, Morrow Co., Ohio, 1858- 1865; the high school, Tipton, Cedar Co., lo\-va, 1865-1869; the high school, Marshalltown, 1869-1870. The spring of 1870 he taught district school in the Dobson schoolhouse, Tama county, ten miles due east of Marshalltown. The fall of 1870 he entered the State U niver­ sity of Iowa at lo\-va City, and graduated from the same in 187 8 with the degree of (B. Ph.) Bachelor of Philosophy. To ''put himself through college'' he taught alternate years in dis­ trict school; in Scott county near Wolcott; in Marshall county south of Marshalltovvn and near State Center; and in the year 1875-6 as first assistant in the Oskaloosa, Iowa, high school. H. H. Se_erley was city superintendent, and C. B. Jack principal of the high school. One year also was spent as assistant train dispatcher to J. G. Gullier, dispatcher on the Iowa Central Ry., in the Marshalltown office. · During his university course, in addition to the regular work he took studies in the .course in Didactics, the Normal department, under Dr. Stephen N. Fellows, professor in charge. The university conferred on him in 1880 the degree (B. D.) Bache­ lor of Didactics, for successful experience in teaching, and in 1881 the honorary degree of (M.A.) Master of Arts. In 1884 he received 2n Iowa State Teacher's Life Diploma, granted by the State Educational Board of Examiners. In 1905 a Missouri State Teacher's Life Certifi­ cate was granted to him. He held the fallowing positions: 1878-82-Principal of the schools of Tipton, Cedar county, Iowa. FAMILY OF ORION CoTTON ScoTT 57

1882-86-Principal of high school, Oskaloosa, Mahaska county, Iowa. 1886-98-Superintendent of city schools, Oskaloosa; Iowa (in \vhich there were 54 teachers when he left). 1898-1903- Berwyn, Cook county, Illinois, as superintendent of the schools of District No. 100, ·which comprised the villages of Ber­ wyn, Clyde, LaVergne, \V. Morton Park, and Drexel in the town (T·wp.) of Cicero. · April and May, 1905-Principal of high school, Steelville, Crawford county, Missouri (in the Ozarks). · 1905-07-Superintendent of city schoo1s, Higginsville, LaFayette county, Missouri. Here he had the novel experience of supervising schools in which the ne·gro, or black, principal, teachers and pupils were in one building, and whites only in the other buildings. 1907 to date-Teacher in the Chicago public schools. 1876-1898, ·and also 1900 and 1903, conductor or instructor (and often both) during twenty-three consecutive summers, in county teach­ ers' Normal Institutes in lo\va, in the f ollovving counties, returning as many as five fimes or summers to a county: Osceola, Clark county; Oskaloosa, Mahaska county; Fairfield, J ef­ ferson county; Hampton, Franklin county; Tipton, Cedar county; Glen-w·ood, Pottawattomie county; Sigourney, Keokuk county; Ot­ tum\,va, Wapello county. 1892 he conducted the County Normal Institute and delivered two lectures during the session, in Imperial, Chase county, Nebraska. His appointment to institute work ·was under the following State Superintendents of Public Instruction in Iowa: 1876-82, Carl W. von Coelin; 1882-88. John "'·· Akers: 1888-92, Henry Sabin; 1892-94, John B. Knoepfler; 1894-98, Henry Sabin; 1898-1904, Richard C. Barrett; 1904-10, John F. Riggs. 1892, President of the Alumni Association of the State University of .Iowa. 1895, Captain of Sons of Veterans, Oskaloosa, lo\va, Post or Camp. 1896, President of the Teachers' Associa~ion of South\vestern Iowa District. 1891-92, Delegate and Representative from the lo\,va State Teach­ ers' Association to the National Educational Association at its meetings, 1891 Toronto, Ontario, Canada; and 1892 Saratoga Springs, New York. 1902-3-4, Secretary Anti-Cigarette League of Chicago and America, headquarters and offices 1119 Woman's Temple, corner Monroe and LaSalle Streets, Chicogo, of which Lucy Page Gaston \Yas superinter.­ dent and founder. He attended the World's Cotton Exposition at Ne\, Orleans during the holiday season in 1883, 2ccompanied by thirty of his teacheis, \,Yhen they visited the grounds of the Battle of , where General Ja2kson won his famous victory over the British in the \Var of 1812. In 1915 he spent the summer in a trip to his son at the Presideo of FAMILY OF ORION CoTTON ScoTT

1\1:onterey, Calif., the Expositions at San Diego and San Francisco, then on to Portland, Tacoma, Seattle, Spokane, Coeur d' Alene, Idaho, Ab- erdeen and Vermillion, S. Dakota. . He is a teetotaler, or prohibitionist, in practice and faith; an anti-to­ bacco and anti-cigarette advocate; was born, educated, and voted as a Republican· until the "Invisible government" and "Old Guard" made a Progressive of him. He is a member of the Masonic order (A. F. & A. M.) Frotn his earliest recollection he has been a regular attendant in Sunday School, and the church services on Sunday. For· twenty-four years ·he was a member of the Congregational church. On moving to Berwyn in 1898, there being no Congregational church, he and family joined the Berwyn M. E. church.· Among his earliest recollections are: First, the big fire in 1855 or '56 in Malta, Ohio, as seen from his trundlebed through the bedroom window in McConnellsville, which is on the opposite side of the Mus­ kingum river from Malta; and second, marching in the ''Wide-Awakes'' parade, holding to his father's hand, during the Lincoln campaign, in Cardington, Morrow county, Ohio. Each person carried a torch made of wicking in a tin can on the top of a stick or standard, and ·wore a black oil cloth cape. Songs and yells lightened the spirits as the torches did the roadway; and seeing the train loads of soldiers going·'' 'way down south into Dixie''. The most impressive .sight was the funeral train carrying the body and friends of the martyred Lincoln, when from the roof of the ~rain elevator shed he saw through the car window the casket of little 'Tad Lincoln" beside that of his father, and down in the larger casket the face of the great Lincoln, which crowds of anxious people, early that April morning, were marching or passing throu·gh the cars to look upon for the last time before the train should carry the body on south to lie in state. in the capitol at Columbus,_ Ohio. Flagler Family

Mary Wetherhead 1 1. Henry Flagler } b --, Rhode Island ~ Mary Flagler b July 27, 1836, Niagara 1 J esdie Fremont Flagler m Dec. 15, 1817, W ushington · 1 b Dec.4,1819,\Vash, Co.,N.Y. r Co .. N. Y. 2· Maud} Twins Co., N. Y. d Apr.7,1824,Wash. Co.,N.Y. d 1915.Kalamazoo, Mich. 13' Claud. b Dec.23,1872 d Niagara Co., N. Y. m Nov., 1861 · 1. James Flagler ( 1. Sylvester Flaglt•r Nancy T. Clark ,- b Dec. 18, 1780, Dutchess Co. b July30,1804,Wash.Co.,N.Y. [ · N.Y. cl Dec. 28, 1856, Niagara Co., 2. Gn1;nsey Flagler ~ l1. Charles Sumner Fla~ler d Dec. 31, 1825, Washington N. Y. m Oct. 4, 186(> 2. \Villiam Henry Flagler Co., N. Y, 2. John Hall F'lagler Lois Marsh, LaPeer Co., 3. John Flagler m June 10, 1802, Washington b Dec.3,1806,Wash. Co.,N.Y. Mich. Co.,N. Y. d--- . • 1. Arthur Elizur Chapman 2. Simon Flagler 3. Felix Henry Flagler 3. Frances Ermindal:lagler} b Feb. 22, 1870, Jackson John Flagler b Nov. 11, 1782 b Feb. 23, 1800, Washington b Apr. ?.4, 1841, Niagara Co., Mich. m -- Co., N. Y. Co., N. Y. 2. Wesley Chapman b Sept. 2, 1756, Dut­ d Sept. 14, 1851 d--. ehess Co., N. Y. 3. Jane Flagler d Nov. 15, 1809, Washington b, d Grass Lake, Mich. d :Mar. 25,1810,Wash­ Co., N. Y. · m Oct. 4, 1866 3. Russell Norris Chapman b June 22, 1784 b Aug. 24, 1872, Grass ington Co., N. Y. · d June 18, 1826 George R. Chapman , 4. Mary Flagler Lake, Mich. 4. Thomas Flagler l m June 16, 1900, Ravens­ b April 17, 1786 wood, Chicago, Ill. d June 22, 1794 b f~:·J~•f~lO, Washington ~; 5. Jemima Flagler :I Frankie May Hart b Nov. 27, 1787, Dutchess d l\'lar. 25,1888, Oskaloosa,Ia. 4. Emily M elaci ndaFlaglcr, Co., N. Y. m Nov. 9, 1834, Niagara Co., b May 12, 1843, Niagara} d --, Cataraugus Co., N.Y. Co., N. Y. {Jennie May Millar N.Y. 5. Martin Flagler d ,Jany. 6, 1916, Seymour, b Dec.24,1868,GrassLakc, 6. John Fllaglrr b Feb. 12, 1813, Washington Texas l Mich. b March 26, 1790 Co., N. Y. · , m Aug. 25, 1867 d May 2, 1824 d Feb. 2, 1863, Niagara Co., William G. Millar Jcrusha Baker I N.Y. b May 10, lf'.41 d -- b MarC"h 2, 1763, Dut­ and (Twins) l 7. Jerusha Flagler 6. Viney Ann Flagler chess Co., N. Y. b May 13, 1815 d July :iu, 1831,Wash­ b l\1 arch 26, 1790 ington Co., N. Y. d-- 8. Elane Flagler LMary Flagler b Nov. 16, 1857, Niagara b Feb. 6, 1792 Co., N. Y. l cl-- 9. Barton Flagler m June 26, 1879 b Feb. 27, 1794, Washington Co.,N. Y. I{1. Harold Orion Scott l d July 2, 1794, Washington ~ 2. Mabel Emma Scott Co., N. Y. 3. Ralph pleland Seott 10. Betsy Flagler I 4. Bertha Mary Scott bJuly 17, 1799, Washington Co., N. Y. d 8ept. 9, 1803 I Viney Hall Orion Cotton Scott J b Oct. 2, 1786, Hartford, Ct. Ohio, Iowa, Chicago, Ill. cl Nov. 15, 1816, Washington 1. Rachel Mary Garnsey Co., N. Y. Flagler Family ( Continued) Daniel Garnsey r 1. Hon. John Garnsey 1 f 1. Rachel Mary Garnsey J ~ A Huguenot from Normandy b Mar. 13, 1810, Dundas Co., } Assemblyman in N. Y. legis­ Ontario, Canada lature many years from Roy­ , - d Mar. 25, 1882, Michigan, r Rachel Jones n.lton. '1 own Clerk and Jus­ LaPeer, LaPeer county Fanny Jones tice of the Peace. rn Firnt to Diadema Potter, 2. Fanny Garnsey Samuel Jones } Nancy Jones who lived only seven years b Aug, 31, 1811 Moved from Sarato- Martha Jones -no children d Aug. 30, 1838 ga, N. Y., to Dundas Patience Jones rn Second time in Mar., 1809 I. m John Hoover co~;JY• Ontario Odell Jones .2. Peggie Garnsey ~ 3. William Henry Garnsey 3. Annie Garnsey (Triplets) b Nov. 20, 1813 Miss--- , J mnes Jones 4.-- . d Nog. 16, 1836 Burgoyne Jones 5. William Garnsey 4. Margaret D. Garnsey 1 Clinton Jones 6. Hachel Garnsey b Mar. 21, 1816. d --- 7, Nannie Garnsey 5. Rev. Samuel Peter Garnsey vVilliam Jones 8. Funny Garnsey rn Mary Ann \Vhite lEnos Jones !l. Samuel Garnsey 6. Nancy Garnsey l 10. Cynthia Garnsey b Jany. 20, 1820 d June 13, 1899 1. Nancy G. Knight m Thomas Jones I b Jany. 5, 1838 cl -- 7. John Garnsey b-d Feb. 15, 1823 2. Charles L. Knight )jl. Jerold F. I\'.night 8. Cynthia S, Garnsey b Aug. 9, 1839 l. 2. Sarnh Anna J\. night I m April 2, 1871 b June 12, 1824 f la. Hazel M. Knight d Feb., 1850 Anna M. Swift ., 1. Henry Bolton f 1. Nancy Bolton rn John McArthur Henry Bolton Married in Terre b Dec. ;;.3, 1787, 2:15 P. M. '3. Una Eugenia Knight ('!'wins) 9. Na than Bangs Garnsey I Bonne, Quebec · b Sept. 7, 1826 b Jany. 15, 1843 d -- and , } 2. William Bolton 2. Mary Bolton , Hannah Spate { b Dec. 23, 1787, 2:15 P. M. d Feb. 9, 1890 3. Bettie Bolton rn Ap1•. :rn, 1806, Rev. Na.than 10. Annie Garnsey I l4. John G. Knight }{1. ,John T. Knight b June 23, 1847 2. ,James h.nig:it Bangs, 0. D. d In infancy d Ji'eb. 8, 1884 3. l\'linnie :\11. Knight I 3. Peter Bolton 11. John W. Garnsey 1 m Sept., 1873 4. Alice l:,;alwl Knight , b l\lay 8, 1789 b Feb. 6, 1834 d Feb. 23, 1902 m May 19, 1861 Mary Connelly 4. Wil.iam Bolt.on Janette Chubbock, d 1894 d Jany. 4, 1795 5. Henry Bolton b ,Jany. 21, 1797 6. Jc,seph Bolton b .Jany. 10, 1800 Mr. - LeTour Margaret LeTour From Normandy, I-I uguenot-French France, descended Catherine LeTour John L. Knight· from the Governor b Dec. 21, 1812 of Nova Scotia .Joseph LeTour d Nov. 30, 1855 and Baptiste LeTour m Feb. 23, 1837 M----­ Antoine LeTour Michigan, New York M----- (Half brother) FAMILY OF ORION CoTTON ScoTT 61

Mrs. Mary (Flagler: Scott was born at Royalton, Niagara county, New York, where she lived one year, when her parents moved to a farm not far from Detroit, Mich. _ She attended district school and the Grass Lake high school, from which she receiv~d a diploma of graduation dated June 22, 1871. Little did she then think that her classmate, Jennie Miller, and she, would be­ come grandparents to the same children. At the age of eighteen she taught, and was the third sister to teach in the same district school, near Detroit. She taught one year.in the schools of Libertyville, Lake county, Ill. ; ":as clerk one year in the postoffi.ce, Jackson, Mich. ; moved to Iowa and was a member of the first class on the founding and opening of the Iowa State Normal ·School, now the State Teachers' College, at Cedar Falls. Prot J. C. Gilchrist, then principal of the Normal School, was succeeded by Homer H. Seerley, now serving his thirty-second year. Here both before and after attending the normal school she taught in the public schools of Cedar Falls, in the primary department one year, also in the high school. In 1878 to 1880 she was teacher in the grammar department of the schools of Tipton, Cedar county, Iowa; the first year in the old build­ ing south of Monument Square, and the second year in the new building northeast of the courthouse, her school being in line in the grand march led by the brass band, ''from the old building to the new'', the day of dedication, May, 1879. In June, 1879, she was united in marriage to Orion Cotton Scott, principal in charge of the schools of Tipton. Together \-vith Mr. and Mrs. Homer H. Seerley they spent a portion of the summer vacation at Clear Lake, Iowa. Two sons and t,vo daughters were born to this union: · Harold Orion Scott, D. D.S., is a graduate, class of_ 1902 (May 4), Chicago College of Dental Surgery. 1902-1905 he practiced dentistry in Berwyn and Evanston, Ill. May 10, 1905, he enlisted in the U. S. Army. Sept. 4, 1907, was made Contract Dental Surgeon, U. S. A . . May 4, 1911, commissioned First Lieutenant Dental Surgeon, U. S. A. June 3, 1916, commissioned Captain and assigned to the Dental Corps, U. S. A. His places of residence have been: Tipton, Ia., 1880-81; Oska­ loosa, Ia., 1881-1898; .Benvyn (Chicago), Ill., 1898-1904; Evanston, Ill., 1904-1905; Manila and Pampanga, Philippine Islands, U.S. Army, 1905-1909;. Columbus Barracks, Ohio, Dec. 1909-Dec. 1910; Fort Hamilton, l'L Y., Jany.,. 1911; General Hospital, Presideo, San Fran­ cisco, Calif., to March, 1911; Philippine Islands, March 1911 to April 1914 (Manila; Camp Connell, Samar; Warwick Barracks, Cebu; Camp Downes, Lyte; Camp Overton, Mindanao; and Camp Keith- 62 FAMILY OF ORION CoTTON ScoTT ley, Mindanao); 1914-1916, Presideo of Monterey, Calif., and Fort Rosecrans, San Diego, Calif. Dr. Scott's school life began in Oskaloosa, Ia., when at the age of seven he attended a private kindergarten conducted by Mrs. Dr. Hugg. At the age of eight he entered the Oskaloosa public schools, of which his father ·was the city superintendent. He completed the grammar school course in 1894 and graduated from the Oskaloosa High School, Class 1898 (June). He was interested in athletics, and during his college course played on the college football team. He acted as coach during part of his res­ idence in Manila for the military or army football teams. During the fall of 1916 Dr. H. 0. Scott was with General Pershing in Mexico, a member of the expeditionary force sent by President Wil­ son into that country. Mrs. Dr. Scott's school !if e was spent in Grass Lake, Mich., where she graduated from the high school. She afterwards for a time taught district school. During a portion of her residence in she was a saleslady and bookkeeper in a music store. She plays the piano and Dr. Scott the mandolin. Her places of residence prior to her marriage were: Brooklyn, Ia., 1882-1884; Jackson, Mich., 1884-1887; Grass Lake, Mich., 1887- 1904; Los Angeles, Calif., 1904-1906; Glendale, Calif., 1906-1909.

. Mabel Emma (Scott) Adams resided with her parents in Oskaloosa, Mahaska county, Iowa (1884-1898), where she completed the course in the grammar department of the city schools (1898).. In September, 1898, the family moved to Berwyn, Cicero Twp., Cook _Co., Ill., ten miles west of Chicago. In· 1902 she graduated from _the J. Sterling Morton High School; z". e., the Cicero Tvvp. high school, located at 25th St. and 60th (or Austin) Avenue in Clyde. The building vras named in honor of President Cleveland's popular Secretary of Agricul­ ture, and the founder of Arbor Day. She attended Lewis Institute, Chicago, two years; taught country school one term near Barrington, and the next year taught in the town of Barrington, Cook Co., Ill., and the follovving two years in Berwyn, in the Custer building, and one year in the city schools of Tacoma, Wash. She spent orie year in col­ lege at Oberlin, Ohio, and three and one-half years in training in the Presbyterian Hospital, corner Wood and Congress streets, adjoining Rush Medical College, Chicago, and graduated in 1914. The state board granted her the (R. N.) Registered Nurse certificate that same year. On recommendation of the Presbyterian Hospital officials she was appointed a visitor and inspector for the courts in connection with the psycopathic department of the Cook County Hospital, where she served two years. She resides in Chicago. l\Irs. Wilma (Corwin) Scott Back-H('l('n Sc-ott Front-I\fary .Jane Scott, Harold Orion Scott, Jr.

FAMILY OF ORION CoTTON ScoTT

Ralph Cleland Scott completed the course in the grammar school department of the city schools of Oskaloosa, Iowa, June 1898~ He graduated fro1n the J. Sterling Morton high school, at. Clyde, Cook Co., Ill., the suburb next east of Berwyn, in June, 1903. During the. years 1904-8, while in the employ in Chicago of The Scully Steel and Iron Company and later the Standard Oil Company in office work, and as salesman and bookkeeper, he attended the Central (Chicago) Y. M C. A. night school and completel a course in short­ hand and typewriting, and during two years attended die John Mar­ shall Law School, evening sessions. In September 1908 he entered the University of Illinois at Champaign­ Urbana where he attended four years and graduated with the degree of Bachelor of Arts. He had identified himself actively, on entering the University, with the college Y. M. C.A. and served during his Junior and Senior years as the President of the Board of Directors of the Young Men's Christian Associatian and the year following as the Graduate Secretary of the As­ soc1at1on. During these same years he was assistant to the pastor, Dr. J. C. Baker of Trinity church. He was a member of the State Univer­ sity Batallion, State Militia, and held the rank of Captain. In the fall of 1913 he entered Boston (Mass.) University School of Theology and graduated from the same with the degree of Bachelor of Divinity in June 1916. While pursuing his course in theology he served as student pastor of the Trinity Me~hodist Episcopal Church at Newburyport; as assistant pastor of the M. E. Church with Rev. Wright in Melrose, near Boston, and as pastor of the M. E. Church in Ballardvale, suburb of Boston. He spent a summer at the Y. M. C. A. Conference, directed _by John R. Mott, at Lake George, New York, and conducted classes two summers in the Y. M. C. A. Conference at East Northfield-the old home of Dwight L. Moody. He also taught classes in the Boston Y. M. C. A. evening school during much of the time of his residence in Boston. With his wife and six months old daughter Jean, he sailed June 17, 1916, fro1n on the steamship ''Vasari'' of the Lamport Holt line for Montevideo, Uruguay, South America, to spend eight months in that city and Buenos Aires, Argentina, acquiring· a speaking knowledge of the Spanish language and doing some work in the Y. M. C. A. of which there are well equipped organizations in both cities, thus acquainting himself with the spirit, manner, and customs of the people. He went then to Santiago, the capital of Chile, via the Trans-Andean Railway, running from Buenos Aires west across the pampas of Argen­ tina, over the Andes Mountains to the Pacific Coast. He went to establish and have charge of the Y. M. C. A. work among the students of the universities of that city, the third largest in South America. FAMILY OF ORION CorroN ScoTT

Mrs. Genevieve (Dupuy) Scott, his wife, '\-Vas a student in the Univer­ sity of Illinois and assistant to Dr. J. C. Baker, the pastor of Trinity M .. E. Church, Urbana, in charge of the work among the young women. At L1.e same time Mr. Scott was assistant in Trinity in work among the young men. Here they became acquainted and she shared two years of arduous study and '\-Vork with him in Boston and suburbs. She served while at the University of Illinois als·o as President of the University Young Woman's Christian Association. Bertha Mary Scott received her kindergarten and primary training in the schools of Oskaloosa, Iowa, where she was born in the ''Wilson house" on the corner of 3rd Ave. and 4th Street, 1887. She com­ pleted the course in the grammar school, Emerson building, Berwyn, Cook County, Ill., and attended the J. Sterling Morton High School, Cicero, and the Metropolitan Business College, Chicago, where she be­ came proficient in shorthand and typewriting. She was a stenographer in Chicago four years, the last one· with the Otis Elevator Company in office in the Railway Exchange building, Michigan A venue. She later attended the University of Illinois one year; was stenographer for a member of the faculty; then took a stenographic position io Ann Arbor, M~. - She was a singer in the church choir, in which she was often called on to take solo parts. · Corwin Family

1. Deborah Corwin 1. John Corwin l 1. John Corwin 2. Martha Corwin 1. Bei,-ijamin Cor­ b 1735 2. James Corwin 3. Isaac H. Corwin Mathias Corwin 1. Capt. John Cor­ wm d Dec, 22, 1817 3. Josr.ph Corwin 4. Joseph Corwin b 1590 (?) win 2. John Corwin ·. m March 20, 1755 { 4. Hubbard Corwin 5. John Corwin d Sept. 1, 1658, at b 1663 b June 10, 1705 2. James Corwin 5. Isaac Corwin 6. Manasseh R. Southold, L. I. 1. John Corwin d Dec. 13, 1730 d Dec. 22, 1755 3. William Corwin b April 7, 1750 Corwin 1630, a landholder b 1630 2. Mathias Corwin 3. David Corwin 4. Eliza beth Corwin d Nov. 1, 1830 7. James Young d Sept. 25, 1702 3. Samuel Corwin 4. Sarah Corwin 5. Sarah Corwin Corwin at Ipswich, Mass. { 1640, a landholder 2. Martha Corwin 4. Sarah Corwin 5.Elizabeth Corwin b Nov. 11, 1789 at Southold, L. I. 3. Theophilus Cor­ 5. Rebecca Corwin 6. Hester -Corwin 7.6.-} -- Names

1. Arthur Elizur Chapman 1r 1. Frances Grace b Feb. 22, 1870, Grass Lake. I Chapman Geo. R. Chapman 1 Mich. b July 4, 1904, Mil- b June 1, 1837, Jackson, Mich d -- waukee, Wis. d Feb. 2, 1902, Los Angeles, m June 27, 1901, Clyde, Ill. i 2. (Not Christened) Calif. Rssidence 2742 S. 59th Ave. I Boy . Cicero, Cook Co., Ill. · L 3. Georgiana Elizabeth m Oct. 4, 1866, Grass Lake, j 2. Wesley Chapman Chapman Mich. Son of Elit.ur Bow­ man and Julia Ann (Black­ b May 24, 1871 I b Feb. 20, 1915, Chi- man) Chapman of Jack­ d July 17, 1871 cago, Ill. son, Mich. 3. Russell Norris Chapman 1 b Aug. 21, 1872, Grass Lake, Frances Erminda Flagler Mich. I ' b April 24, 1841, Suspension d--. Bridge, N. Y. d--· . m June 16, 1909, Chicago,•Ill. I

1. Lucretia Irene MacDonald J Peter MacDonald b Dec. 26, 1874, Clyde, Ill. b July 31, 1842, Caledonia, 2. Grace Edna MacDonald Livingston Co., N. Y. b Mar. 9, 1877 d-- { d Aug. 12, 1893 m Oct.15, 1873,at Wauconda, 3. George Alan MacDonald { No children Lake Co., Ill. b Nov. 25, 1878 · Neelie Hammond d May 23, 1910 b Dec. 21, 1851, at Wayne, Local editor Chicago Jour­ DuPage Co., Ill. nal. d--

Rev. Franklin Lle,velyn 2. Frankie May Hart Hart b July 18, 1877, Red Wing, b Oct. 20, 1852, Hamilton Minn. N.Y. I r d-- d-- l. Carrie Lenora Hart m June 16, 1875, at Red b Feb. 29, 1876 Wing, Minn. Residence 3. Louie Blanche Hart Chicago, Ill. b Sept. 27, 1879 Carrie Sargent J l4. Myrtle Belle Hart b Apr. 2, 1854, Haverhill, b June 21, 1886 Mass. d-- The Adams Family I-Joseph Samuel Adams B May 23, 1853, England D - Dec. 27, 1912, China M-Sept. 21, 1877, Rangoon, Burma Eleanor Sarah Tylar B-Dec. 7, 1856, England D--- II-1. Arthur Soltau Adams B-Aug. 22, 1878, Rangoon, Burma M-Aug. 4, 1904, Horsham, England Mabel Grinstead Children: Bertha Margaret, b July 2, 1905 Ronald Weston, b Sept. 14, 1906 Stella Mary, b July, 19~9 Norman Joseph, b March 30, 1912 II-2. Sidney Grant Adams B-Oct. 29, 1879, Hankow, China M-May 15, 1908, , China Grace M. Wilson Children: Theodore Dodsworth, b_ March 12, 1909 Oliver, b --- II-3. Joseph Frank Adams B-Oct. 8. 1881 D-Dec. 12, 1881, WeI1chow, China 11-4. Edith Cushing Adams B-Sept. 16, 1882, Kinwha, China M-Sept. 16, 1902, Cambridge, Mass, \Villiam Harold Millard B-March 9, 1909, Shanghai, China Children: III-1. Eleanor Adams B-July 8, 1903 D-March 9, 1009 (Shai.) III-2. Ruth Cadbury B-June 2, 1905 . III-3. John Crockett B-March 23, 1907 M-July 6. 1911, Newton Centre, Mass. Charles S. Deming, of Korea II-5. f• leanor Lounds Adams B-May 31, 1884, Ningpo, China M-April 2, 1914, Llandrilloyn, North Wales Harry B. l\1organ II-6. Archibald Guinness Adams B-July 25, 1887, Ningpo, China M-June 7, 1914, Newton Centre, Mass. Clive Orrell Mason II-7. Gordon Charles Adams B-Jan. 14, 1889, Kinwha, China M-Dec. 24, 1914, Berwyn, Ill. Mabel Emma Scott II-8. Bernard David Adams B-Sept. 20, 1892, Woodford, England l\1--- II-9. Harold Gillet Adams B-Nov. 26, 1896, Hankow, China M--- Gordon Charles Adams, M. D., is a specialist in nose and throat diseases, and was connected with North Chicago Hospital as interne. He plans to go as medical to China. The Dupuy Family I-Joseph Dupuy Colonial records show him in 1784 to be a resident and land O\Vner in Wilkes county, Georgia. (Further data unknown) II-1. Joseph Dupuy, Jr. (son of the above) B-March 12 (?), 1776, Wilkes county, Ga. D- (not known) III-1. Joseph Nichols Dupuy B-Jany. 18, 1800, Wilkes county, Ga. D- (not known) IV-1. vVilliam McKendree Dupuy B-July 17, 1835, St. Clair county, Ill. D- (not known) M- (date not known) Elizabeth i• ord V-1. George Alexander Dupuy B-March 4, 1858, St. Clair county, Ill., on a farm five miles northeast of Mascoutah D-- M-July 19, 1883, at the home of the bride's mother in Normal, Ill., Rev. Samuel Van Pelt, elder broth~r of the bride, officiating Mary Lenore Van Pelt B-Aug. 13, 1860, Todd's Point, Shelby county, Ky. Daughter of Rev. John F. Van Pelt and Mary Elizabeth Wight _ VI-1. Helen Agnes Dupuy B-Dec. 28, 1885, Ravenswood, Chicago, Ill. D--- M-Nov. 6, 1912, at 4526 North Paulina Street, Chicago, Rev. Samuel Van Pelt, uncle of the bride, officiating Charles \Villiam Deusner B-Dec. 1, 1876 D--- Vll-1. Mary Dupuy Deusner B-Aug. 13, 1916 ·VI-2. Margaret Dupuy B-Dec. 27, 1888, Ravenswood, Chicago, Ill. D--- M-Dec. 27, 1913, at 4526 North Paulina Street, Chicago, Ill., Rev. J. Morriston Thomas officiating Arthur Roy Simpson B-March 20, 1888 D--- VII-1. Janet Simpson B-March 21, 1915 VI-3. Genevieve Elsie Dupuy B-Feb. 9, 1891, Ravenswood, Chicago, Ill. D--- M-June 4, 1914, at 4526 North Paulina Street, Chicago, Ill., Rev. J.C. Baker, D.D., pastor Trinity M.E. Church, Urbana, Ill., officiating Ralph Cleland f:cott B-Nov. 3, 1885, Oskaloosa, Ia. D--- Vll-1. Jean Flagler Scott B-Nov. 24, 1915, Boston, Mass. VI-4. Mary Elizabeth Dupuy B-Aug.13, 1894 D--- THE DUPUY FAMILY

George Alexander Dupuy resides at 4526 North Paulina St., (Ravenswood) Chicago, Ill., his home for nearly thirty yea'rs. He was admitted to the ba.r, and has been in the practice of law in Chicago. · He served as Judge of the Superior Court of Cook County, Illi­ nois, 1904 to 1910, and has since been the Attorney for the Illinois Central railroad, with office in Chicago. Judge and J\1rs. Dupuy are members of the Ravenswood Congre­ gational church. She is an active member in the lv1issionary Soci­ ety of that denomination~ Together they have traveled much in the United States and have made two visits to Europe. The Atherton Family

f 1. Cora Gertrude Atherton b Oet. 11, 1861 . m l\fay 5, 1880 Cleland McCulloch Scott Isaiah Young Atherton Res. Council Bluffs, Iowa, Caleb Atherton b Sept. 30, 1839, Shippenberg, 236 N 2nd St. Pa. and } d-- I 2. EEzabeth Casey Atherton Elizabeth Casey { Residence Des Moines, Ia. b Jany. 8, 1865, Greencastle, m July 31, 1860, Middle­ Franklin Co., Pa. springs, Cumberland Co., I m Sept. 14, 1887, Swan, Iowa Pa .. Rev. I. N. Hayes offi­ John Thomas Phillips ciating Res. Boone, Iowa 3. Charles Staufer Atherton l l b Sept. 24, 1866, Greencastle, Pa. m Apr. 21, 1897, Peru, Ill. I Barbara Dachsteiner 1910 at Cherry Coal Mines, Peter Stauffer I Ill., was assassinated by b Nov., 1803 Milish Mondich d Nov. 22, 1856 d Feb. 22, 1910. at St. Mary's Descendant of Ho- f Sarah Stauffer j 1- hospital, LaSalle, Ill. benstaufens of Ger- (Staufer in Germany) Res. of MrR. C. S. A ther­ many from Conrad I) b Feb. 19, 1835, near New­ ton, Ladd, Ill, IV (d 1254) ~ berry.Cumberland Co.,Pa. d April 26, 1889, Swan, Mar- 4. Nancy Sharp Atherton and 'ion Co., Iowa b Dec. 29, 1867, Mercersburg, I Pa. Druscilla Confair I m July 1, 1886, Swan, Iowa John Alfred Nelson I Res. Nebraska City, Nebr. L 5. Josephine Butler Atherton b Sept. 2, 1876, Knoxville, Marion Co., Iowa m Feb. 5,1906,Council Bluffs, Iowa Adelbert N. Harris Res. Des Moines, Iowa Family of Charles Scott

III-6. Charles Scott B-May 2, 1822, Guernsey county, Ohio D-J uly 4, 1910, Drakesville, Iowa M-Oct. 2, 1849, Eldersville, Pa. 1.vlary Jane Cassidy B-July 19, 1830, Washington county, Pa. D-April 8, 1903, Drakesville, Iowa. Daughter of John and Jane Cassidy, Elders­ ville, Pa. Children: IV-1. Eliza beth Jane IV-2. John Alexander IV-3. James Osborn IV-4. Susan McCulloch IV-5. Loretta Adelaide IV-6. Elmer Ells,vorth IV-7. Annis Anne IV-8. Ella Dale IV-1. Elizabeth Jane Scott B-Aug. 27, 1850, in Carrolton, Ohio D-June 15, 1915. For many years a cripple. Buried in Drakesville, Iowa, cemetery IV-2. John Alexander Scott B-June 2ti, 1852, in Carroll county, Ohio D-March 12, 1906, in Colorado Springs, Colo. Buried in Drakesville, Iowa, cemetery IV-3. James Osborn Scott B-May 2, 1854, Carroll county, Ohio D--- M-April 26, 1883 Emma E. Harris B-Oct. 19, 1855, near Bloomfield, Iowa D--- Resides Eldon, Iowa Children: V-1. Bert -Lee Scott B-May 17, 1884, Ogden, Iowa D--- Attended school in Eldon, Iowa. Residence Liberal, Kans. M-Sept. 21, 1912 Sydney D. Dodds, residence Bentonsport., Io,va B-Aug. 3, 1881, Pierceville, Iowa D--- Vl-1. Mildred Vauncele Scott B-Sept. 10, 1915, Eldon, Iowa V-2. Lulu Blanche Scott B-Nov. 12, 1888, Eldon, Iowa D--- ~1-Sept. 16, 1916 Henry H. Hamilton. Residence Osceola, Iowa V-3. Harry Otis Scott B-Sept. 26, 1890, Eldon, Iowa D--- Residence Corazal, Canal Zone, Panama, in regular army. At­ tended school in Eldon, Iowa V-4. De,vey Clarence Scott B-Oct. 21, 1893, Eldon, Iowa D--- Residence Eldon, Iowa. Attended school in Eldon, Iowa 72 FAMILY OF CHARLES ScoTT

V-5. Raymond :Marion Scott B-Feb. 29, 1896, Eldon, Iowa D--- Residence Eldon, Iowa. Attended school in Eldon, Iowa IV-4. Susan McCulloch Scott (Tea.cher in public schools) B-June 22, 1856, Guernsey county, Ohio D-N ov. 9, 1893. Buried in cemetery Drakes·ville, Iowa M-May 20, 1880 I. F. Roudebush B--- D- N ea:r Eldon in 1914. Buried in Eldon, Iowa. Farmer near Drakesville, Davis county, Iowa. Children: V-1. Robert Elmer Roudebush B-Oct. 26, 1881, near Drakesville, Iowa: D--- Moved with his parents to Trenton, Mo., where he attended school. Present rl'oidence Eldon, Iowa V-2. George Os born Roudebush B-Feb. 11, 1885, near Drakesville, Iowa D-Dec. 23, 1887, Trenton, Mo. V-3. Edith May Roudebush B-July 7, 1889, Trenton, :\-Io. D--- At the age of eight years she moved to Drakesville, Io,va, and made her home with her grandparents and attended the public schools, and still resides in Drakesville. She was married to Thomas Sayles, of Drakesville) Iowa. Two children ,vere born to them. IV-5. Loretta Adelaide Scott B-May 21, 1860, Guernsey county, Ohio D--- M -- Sept. 13, 188S Jacob Roberts B-1849 D--- Residence Eldon, Iowa Children: V-1. June Adel Roberts B-June 6, 1889, Eldon, Iowa D--- M-Jany. i, 1913 Roy vVallace, of Trenton, :Mo. Attended school in Eldon, Iowa. Residence Trenton, :\-Io. V-2. Scott Lewis Roberts B-Jany. l, 1891, Eldon, Iowa D--- Residence Cheyenne, Wyo. Attended school in Eldon, Iowa V-3. Edith Fay Roberts B-Sept. 23, 1892, Eldon, Iowa D--- M-Aug., 1911 Clyde I. Boltz. Residence Trenton, Mo. Two children: VI-1. Robert Boltz B-July 17, 1914 D--- Vl-2. Adalaide Boltz B-April 25, 1916 F AMILy OF CHARLES SCOTT 73

Loretta A. S. Roberts moved ,vith her parents from Ohio to Hedrick, Io,va, then to Drakesville, Io,va, ,vhere she attended school. \Vhen 14 years old she went to Pennsylvania and spent five years near Elders­ ville. In 1879 she returned to Io,va and taught school.

IV-6. Elmer Ellsworth Scott B-Sept. 20, 1863. Guernsey county, Ohio D-Oct., 1911. Buried in Monett, Mo. l\tI-Dec. 20, 1888 Lora Sadie Patterson, of Drakesville, Iowa B--- D--- Residence Monett, Mo. Children: V-1. Dialena Scott B-Oct. 18, 1889, Drakesvill;, Iowa .n--- V-2. Charles Francis Scott B-Nov. 20, 1891, Drakesville, Iowa D--- V-3. Edna Leora Scott B-Feb. 27, 1894, Drakesville, Iowa D--- V-4. Orion Glenn Scott B-Oet. 5, 1896, Drakesville, Iowa D--- V-5. Havel Ellen Scott B-July 23, 1899, Mammoth Springs, Ark. D-March 23, 1900 · V-6. Audrey Mary Scott B-Nov. 9, 1904, :Mammoth Springs, Ark. D--- Elmer E. Scott moved with his parents from Guernsey county, Ohio, to Iowa. After marriage he lived on a farm near Drakesville, Iowa, until 1900, when he moved to Mammoth Springs, Ark. Later he moved to Monett, Mo., where his widow resides.

IV-7. Annis Anne Scott B-April 14, 1866, Guernsey Co., Ohio D-Dec. 23, 1913, at Conata, S. :0. Buried in Eldon cemetery M-Sept. 13, 1888 William H. Hamilton, of Drakesville, Iowa B-Nov. 13, 1860, Washington county, Pa. D--- Residence Conata, S. D. Children: V-1. \Villis Fossie Hamilton B-Sept. 13, 1890, Drakesville, Iowa D--- Residence Conata, S. D. V-2. Harry Glenn Hamilton B-Sept. 14, 1892, Eldon, Iowa D-Dec. 9, 1892 V-3. Harold H. Hamilton B-Oct. 1, 1894, Eldon, Iowa D--- Residence Conata, S. D. 74 FAMILY OF CHARLES ScoTT

V-4. Gladys Larue Hamilton B-Jany. 18, 1897, Eldon, Iowa D--- M-1914, Eldon, Iowa Glen Sites of Eldon, Io,va Residence Eldon, Iowa One cbild V-5. Robert Earl Hamilton B-June 11, 1900, Eldon, Iowa D--- (Conata, S. D.) V-6. Charles Scott Hamilton B-Sept. 14, 1~05, Albia, Iowa D--·- (Conata, S. D.) V-7. Lew-is W. Hamilton B-Dec. 8, 1907, Knoxville, Iowa D--- (Conata, S. D.) Annis A. S. Hamilton moved with her parents from Guernsey county, Ohio, to Iowa. She attended the Drakesville public schools, and later taught school. IV-8. Ella Dale Scott B-Aug. 21, 1869, Drakesville, Iowa D--- M-Dec. 27, 1893, Rev. Geo. W. Barber officiating Joseph Milton Gibson B-Feb. 21, 1869, White county, Ind. D--- V-1. Sidney Dale Gibson B-Nov. 21, 1894, Eldon, Iowa D--- Civil engineer, Whittier, Calif. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Gibson reside at 2350 N. 60th St., Seattle, vVash. Charll:'s 8<'ott III Mary Jane (Ca~sidy) Scott 1822-1910 1830-1903

Ross Scott :Mary J. (Friel) Scott 1824-1904 1822-1885

Family of Ross Scott III-7. Ross Scott B-April 28, 1824, Mantua, Guernsey Co., Ohio D-April 14, 1904, Cambridge, Ohio. (Heart disease) M-Sept. 7, 1843, Cambridge, Ohio, Rev. Ross officiating Mary Jane Friel, daughter of Elisha and Nancy Friel B-Dec. 18, 1822, Hancock county, Va. D-Aug. 16, 1885, at the hoine on the old National Pike, three miles east of Cam- bridge, Ohio. Buried in Cambridge cemetery Mr. and Mrs. Scott were members of the Methodist Protestant church. He w.as noted for his generous hospitality, jovial disposition, and the habit of looking on the bright side of life, and she ,vas spoken of by her children as an "ideal mother". Ten children: IV-1 ~ Charlotte Scott IV-6. Mary Magdaline Scott IV-2. John Alexander Scott IV-7. Charles Ross Scott IV--3. \Vinfield Taylor Scott IV-8. Cy Leander Scott IV-4. Susan Catherine Scott IV-9. Annis Porter Scott IV-5. Ed,vin Hamilton Scott IV-10. Oscar Friel Scott IV-1. Charlotte Scott B-Sept. 30, 1844, Cambridge, Ohio D-July 9, 1845, Cambridge, 0 hio IV-2. · John Alexander Scott B-Nov. 13, 1845, Washington, Guernsey Co., Ohio D-March 5, 1864 A soldier in the Civil ,var, member of the First Ohio Cavalry. l·ell from the transport in the Ohio river near Cincinnati and drowned. The body was never recovered. IV-3. Winfield Taylor Scott B-April 23, 1847, Washington, Guernsey Co., Ohio M-Dec. 24, 1869, Cambridge, Ohio, by Rev, Churchill Mary Ellen Burt, daughter of Wm. and Margaret Burt B...:_ __ D-April 17, 1906, in Zanesville, Ohio, of heart disease. Buried in Cam­ bridge, 0., cemetery One child: V-1. · Bertha Scott B-April, 1870, Cambridge, Ohio D-1913, in childbirth. Buried in Cambridge, Ohio M-Sept., 1891 v\ralter Grimes \Vinfield T. Scott has resided in the old homestead, three miles east of Cambridge; Cambridge, Ohio; Cald,vell, Ohio; Huntley, J.\'Iont., in 1914; Garniel, :Mont. IV-4. Susan Catherine (Scott) Doyle B-Aug. 18, 1849, near Cambridge, Ohio M-Jany. 20, 1908, Cambridge, Ohio, Rev. F. A. Brown officiating Mathe,v Doyle, son of John and Sarah Doyle B-July 27, 1845, Middlebourne, Guernsey Co., Ohio Places of residence: \:Vills T,vp., Guernsey Co., 0.; Ken­ .nonsburg, Noble Co.; Cambridge, 0. 1917 ~ddress is 316 N. 10th St., Cambridge, 0. Salesman for Citizens vVholesale Supply Co., Columbus, Ohio. IV-5. Edwin Hamilton Scott B-April 29, 1851, near Cambridge, Ohio D-June 15,1852, near Cambridge, Ohio 76 FAMILY OF Ross ScoTT

IV-6. :Mary MagdalinP- Scott B-Jany. 14, 1853, near Cambridge, Ohio D-April 19, 1884, near Cambridge, Ohio M-April 1, 1882, Cambridge, Ohio 1\iadison Scott, son of Andre,v and Sarah Scott (Not related by blood to his wife) Present residence Cumberland, Ohio One child: V-1. Ethel (Scott) Yerian B-March 27, 1884, Cambridge, Ohio M-.May, 1904, Rev. S. S. Fisher officiating Thomas M. Yerian, son of Mr. and ~1rs. Thomas 1\1. Yerian Places of residence: Cumberland, Ohio; Cambridge,Ohio; Wardner, Idaho; Spokane, \Vash. (1914). Occupation, carriage maker. One child: VI-1. Carlos Yerian B-March 26, 1905, Cumberland, Ohio Student in Spokane schools IV-7. Charles Ross Scott B-Oct. 4, 1857, near Cambridge, Ohio. M-March 27, 1881, Cambridge, Ohio, Rev. Milligan officiating Sarah Jane Buckingham, daughter of Abel and Elizabeth Buck- ingham, of Pennsylvania Occupation, farmer. Residence address R.F.D. No. 8, Cambridge, Ohio. Note: The house is the large brick house, three miles east of Cambridge, 0., on the historic old National (pike) Road, and was a tavern or road house ,vhen travel with mail coach and freight wagons with four and six horses ,vas on that once great thoroughfare. Two children: V-1. Zoe Blanche Scott B-April 11, 1883, Cambridge, Ohio V-2. Basil Scott B-July 6, 1885, Cambridge, Ohio IV-8. Cy Leander Scott B-March 29, 1859, near Cambridge, Ohio M-Dec. 25, 1899, in Cambridge, 0., by Rev. G. M. Wilson Sarah Isabell Campbell, daughter of John and Eiizabeth Camp­ bell Occupation, farmer. Residence No. 416 N. 10th St., Cambridge, 0. Four children: V-1. John Ross Scott B-March 22, 1891, Cambridge, Ohio D--- M-Sept. 5, 1916, Chattanooga, Tenn., Dr. Hooper, Dean of the Uni­ versity of Chattanooga, assisted by Dr. Swisher of the M. E. church, officiating Edith Buquo Goehring Both are graduates of Chattanooga University. Residence is No. 817½ East End Ave., Chattanooga, Tenn. V-2. Orion Campbell Scott B-Dec. 25, 1892, Cambridge, Ohio Telegrapher. Residence 416 N. 10th St., Cambridge, Ohio r AMILY OF Ross ScoTT

-V-3. Charles Arthur Scott B-June 5, 1895, Cambridge, Ohio Student in Cambridge high schoo.1 ·-v - 4. Gladys Elizabeth Scott B-Aug. 24, 1905 -Student in public school }IV -9. Annis Porter (Scott) Hawthorne :B-Oct. 20, 1861, Cambridge, Ohio D-April 28, 1899. Buried ·in Cambridge, Ohio M--Oct. 8, '1891, Cambridge, Ohio, by Rev. F. A. Brown Hendei;son Ha,vthorne, son of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin IIaw­ thorne B-Oct. 26, 1853, Knox Twp., Guernsey county, Ohio D-J:rny. 15, 1901, of pneumonia. Buried in Cambridge, Ohio Occupation, a grocer. -Residences; Cambridge, Ohio; Ne\vcom­ erstown, Ohio One child: V -1. Mary Annis Hawtborn~ B--.:-,Apiil 23, 1899, Ca-mbr-idge, Ohi0 Student in Cambridge _public schools. Residence \i\.,.ith Nf.r. and Mrs. Thomas Doyle, 316 N. 10th St., Cambridge JV -10. Oscar Friel Scott B-Feb. 11, 1864, Cambddge, Ohio M-May, 1892, Ca-mbridg·e, Ohio, by Rev. M-cFarland Ida LePage, daughter of M-r. and l\frs. Adam LePage-, for-met residents of lo",a Residences~ Cambridge, Ohio; Sum•mit, Ohio; Osborn, Moat. P. 0- ~ddress R.F.D. ., Huntley., Mo1it. Occ:1:1pation-, farme-r One child-: V -· 1. Mary :Mildred Scott B-April 7, 1893, Cambridge, Ohio Student in. O.hio \\resleyau University_, Delaware, Ohio Family of Andrew Zane Scott

f 8. Andrew Zane Scott 1 rIV-1. Erastus Pa.tterson · b 'i\!ay 18, 1826, Washington I I IV-2. Samuel Carter Charles Scott l Co., Pa. I I IV-3. Charles Alexander (Pa., Ohio) I. d :-.fay 16. 1907, Hedrick, Ia, j. l IV-4.-·Thomas Mansfield l1 1· Buried in the family lot in I IV-5. Zebedee and I Hedrick, Iowa, cemetery I !V-6. Nevada E. Susan l\IcCullough j \ m Jany. 1. 1847, West Alex- r i IV-7. ZanE: . antler, Pa. ( I IV-8. Anms ' 11 IV-9. Alice IV-10. Josiah . IV-11. William r-1. Margaret Jane I{endall J IV-12. :\Iary_Susan b Sept. 24, 1827 IIV-13. Ulysses Grant d Feb. 16, 1912 l IV-14. :Margar~t JanP: I Burial be$1de husband 1 2. Polly Kendall . m Jack Long Zebadee Kendall } 1 Moved to Illinois in 1862 and ~ 3. Nancy Kendall m John McDowell Mary Susan ~--) Kendall \ 4. Susan Kendall (Pennsylvama.) 1 m James McDowell . 15, Ellen Kendall m John Weisenstein,a farmer \ 6. Catherine Kendall m Conrad Creigbaum I 7. Matilda Cendall m Dave Meeks He attended the canal lock 8. Philip Kendall . m Miss Meeks .9. John Kendall 10. Samuel Kendall l11. Jam es Kendall

111-8. Andrevv Zane Scott lived with his parents until he was married, \Vhen he ,vent on to a farm in Guernsey county, Ohio. Here he remained until 1863, when he moved to Io\va and took charge of a farm in Cedar tovvnship, Mahaska county, not far from Fremont. After four years residence here and t\VO years in Benton township, Keokuk county, he purchased a farm in Wapello county, ten miles nosth "of Ot­ tumwa, vvhich farm he still ovvned at the time of his death. In 1893 he retired from the farm and spent the remaining years of his life in Hed­ rick, Keokuk county, Iovva, vvhere he had purchased a home~a com­ fortable house and a lot of sufficient size for family garden. His death followed a brief illness. Of the fourteen children three died in infancy: !V-6. Nevada E. Scott B-"June 1. 185.5 D-July 7, 1856.. Buried in Catnbridge, Ohio IV-7. Zane Scott B~:Vlarcb 3, 1857 D-March 20, 1859. Buried in Cambridge, Ohio IV-10. Josiah Scott B-Oct. 8, 1860 D---Sept. 15, 1863. Buried in Fremont, Iowa Andrew Zane Scott Margaret J. (Kendall) Scott 1826-1907 1827-1912

Standing-Annis (Scott) Harkins Alice (Scott) Chapman Susan (Scott) Sammons Thomas 1\1. Scott Jennie Scott Humphries U. Grant Scott William Scott Zebh Scott Sitting- Erastus P. Scott Andrew Zane Scott Margaret (Kendall) Scott Charles A. Scott Samuel C. Scott Family of Andrew Zane Scott

FAMILY OF ANDREW ZANE ScoTT 79

Eleven children grevv to maturity and married and moved to homes of their own in Iowa and Kansas. January 1, 1900, the parents celebrated their fifty-third vvedding an­ niversary in Hedrick, Iowa, ·when for the first time in nventy-five years all the members of the family were together: Eleven children, thirteen grandchildren, three great-grandchildren, and other relatives to the num­ ber of thirty-five. A group picture ,v-as then made of the family. The sixtieth anniversary of their marriage ·was celebrated January 1, 1907, at the home in Hedrick, when all the members of the family vvere again present. Andrew Zane Scott, a man of noble principles and honest endeavor, a consistent Christian, and a true friend, had the respect and esteem of all who· knew him. At the time of his death there were ninety-eight living descendants: Eleven children, fifty-nine grandchildren, twenty-eight great-grandchild­ ren, only fourteen deaths having occurred in the four generations of the family. Margaret Jane Kendall, his wife, survived him nearly five years, cared for by the children, all· of ,,vhom had prospered in life; the first three years in her own home in Hedrick, after that ·in the home of her daughter Alice. During the evening time of life she loved to dwell upon the past, and looking back upon her busy life she truly could realize that the years had not been spent in vain. Hers was a vvarmhearted, generous, and loving nature, that spared not herself for the welfare and pleasure of others. The same hope and faith \\'·hich had ever been hers continu~d to sustain her till she peacefully, without illness or pain, passed on to the ''Home over There'' on the evening of February 16, 1912. F'amify of lrastus P.: Scott

tV-1. Erastus Patterson Scott B-Nov. 24~ 1847, Guernsey Co:, Ohio, D--- M-Jany. 23, 1873,.. W apelro Co., Iowa- f;b ristina vVeir Buchanan,. daughter of: Alexander and Anna f(.. Buchanan, natives of Scotland. but residing in. 185;; in Peoria: county, Illinois · · 13-.A ug. 26, 1858, Peoria. Co.~ 1n·.... D--- (Alexander Buchanan was killed in: the- batde of Kenesaw Mountain); V-1. Nellie lviayo Scott V -5. Charles Erastus Scott V-2. Alexander Cameron Scott V -- 6. Benjamin Harrison Scott V-3. Andrew Lloyd Scott v:...-7. Raymond- Earl Scott V-4. vVilliam Forest Scot-t: IV-::::1. Erastus· P'atterson Scutt at the age of fifteen moved vv.ith his: parents from Ohio t0 the~r Io\va home, After his marriage he pul'­ thased a farm in Keokuk county,. Iowa,. three miles west of what is no,v· the tovv'n of I-1edrick,. but then w'as uncultivated p,rairie land.. Here they began the home which they improvedt and to ,vhi(?h they added from time to time1 and here they lived for thirty-t,vo years unti:l their retire­ ment from the active duties of farm life to their home whi.ch they pur­ Ghased in Hedrick, Iowa~ P .. 0 ~ ,- Hedrick, Iowa. V-1. Nellie Mayo Scott 1)-Nov. llf, 1873', on the farm dear Hetlrfok, lows. D--- M-Dec. 22, 1906. home of the bride, Hedri.ck, Iowa, Rev. G. W. Wil­ son-, M .. E. chu:r:ch, officiati:ng tVarren Bentley Gregg,. son of Charles E.. and ~Jary (Bent­ . ley) Gregg, of :Michigan B-Jany .. 2,.1812, Ionia-. Co,, Mich. D--- (Chas. E. Gregg was a veteran oi the civil war) VI-1. Carrie Scott Gregg B-Sept. 15-, 1907, Paci.tic J'l!lnctio», low~ D--- V-L N elHe M. S., Gregg ·was educated in the public schools of Hedrick and in the Iovva State Teachers' College at Cedar Falls, Iowa,. \vhere she graduated and received the degree of Bachelor of Didactics

(B.Di.) in June1 1897 .. She taught in the public schools of Hedrick and vicinity, and in the high schools of N e\vell and Elliott, lo\va. In the latter place she was: principal at the time of her marriage. Warren Bentley Gregg, her husband, \,Vas then Superintendent of the schools in Pacific Junction, and later in l\!Iurray, and in Mystic,.

Iovva. They then moved to lv1ellette county1 S.. D., ·where they lived on a homestead claim for more than a year, and then engaged in school work in that state. Present address is Barnes City, Io\va, where they have charge of the Barnes City consolidated schools. Standing- Raymond Earl Scott Andrew Lloyd Scott Charles Erastus Scott Sitting-Alexander Cameron Scott Christina Weir (Buchanan) Scott Erastus Patterson Scott Nellie Mayo (Scott) Gregg Family of Erastus P. Scott

FAMILY OF ERASTUS P. SCOTT 81

V-2. Alexander Cameron Scott B-Aug. 20, 1876, Keokuk county, Iowa D-- M-Dec. 7, 1898. home of the bride, Hedrick, Iowa, Rev. A. T. Shor­ tess, Ba,tist church, officiating :Mary Smith, daughter of Daniel and Alzetta (Ward) Smith B-July 9, 1881, Hedrick, Iowa D--- Vl-1. :Mary Agnes Scott B-Oct. 8, 1900 D--- Vl-2. Gretna Helene Scott B-Sept. 6, 1902 D--- Alexander Cameron Scott engaged in farming. After two years in Keokuk county he moved to Wapello county. He resides on his o,vn home farm, six miles north of Ottumwa, Iowa. P. 0., R. F. D. No. 3, Ottumwa, Io,v:i V-3. Andrew Lloyd Scott B-A ug. 28, 1879, Keokuk county, Iowa D--- M-March 19, 1902, near Hedrick, Iowa Daisy Abrams, daughter of ·Henry and Nettie (Hamilton) Abrams B-Aug. 7, 1881, near Hedrick, Iowa VI-1. Lena Gusella Scott B-May 6, 1903, Hedrick, Iowa D--- Vl--2. Gladys l\'Iay Scott B-June 8, 1907, Hedrick, Iowa D--- VI-3. Ralph Cleon Scott B-Dec. 24, 1912, Hedrick, Iowa D--- Andre,v Lloyd Scott is a prosperous farmer, his home being hvo miles west of Hedrick, Io,va. P. 0., R.F.D., Hedrick, Iowa V-4. William Forest Scott B-April 11, 1883 D-March 10, 1887, Hedrick, Iowa. Buried in c,emetery at Hedrick,Ia V-5. Charles Erastus Scott B-July 20, 1885, Hedrick, Iowa D--- M-Sept. 8, 1904, Ottumwa, Iowa Lorena Winpigler, daughter of Geo. and Ida vVinpigler B-March 1, 1884 D--- VI-1. Clarence Earl Scott B-Oct. 19, 1905. Hedrick, Iowa D--- Vl-2. Nellie Irene Scott B-March 19, 1910, Hedrick, Iowa D--- Charles Erastus Scott lives on the original homestead, near Hed · rick, Iowa. P. 0., Hedrick, Iowa V-6. Benjamin Harrison Scott B-Nov. 9, 1888 D-Sept. 14, 1889. Buried in Hedrick, Iowa, cemetery V-7. Raymond Earl Scott B-Nov. 5, 18G3, Hedrick, Iowa D--- Graduated from Hedrick, Io\va, high school. Employed as clerk in drug store, Hedrick, lo\va. A student two years in the Depart­ ment of Pharmacy of the State University of Iowa, Iowa City. He is a registered pharmacist. Family of Samuel Carter Scott

IV---2. Samuel Carter Scott B-Feb. 19, 1849, Guernsey Co., Ohio D--- - M-Dec. 25, 1875, Eddyville, Iowa, Rev. Howard Eckels, Eddyville, Iowa, officiating Clara A. Barr. daughter of Daniel and l\1ary Elizabeth (Sponsler) Barr, of Tuscaroras county, Ohio B-July 17, 1857, Tuscaroras Co., Ohio D--- V-1. Jessie May Scott V-2. Harry Walter Scott V-3. Charles Harold Scott V-1. Jessie May Scott B-Nov. 7, 1881, Adams county, Iowa D--- M-Nov. 5, 1902, Corning, Iowa, Rev. W. B. Crudson, Christian church, Council Blu:ff s, Iowa, officiating William F. McCoy, of Cheney, Kans., son of l\Iathew S. and Eliza McCoy B-'--Oct. 19, 1878, Crawfordsville, Washington Co., Iowa D--- VI-1. Alvin• Scott McCoy B-July 14, 1903 D--- Vl-2. Ruth McCoy B-Aug. 13, 1904 D-April, 1905 VI-3. \\-.,. ayne McCoy B-Feb. 10, 1906 D--- VI-4. Ralph Theodore :McCoy B-June 2, 1908 D--- Jessie M. (Scott) McCoy ,vas educated in Corning Academy, and Drake University, Des l\Ioines, Io,va. After her marriage she Ii ved for a year in Kansas. \Villiam F. McCoy, her husband, ·was thereafter, for seven years, in the furniture and undertaking business in Corning; He then ,vent to Los Angeles, and then to San Diego, California, where he conducted a real estate business for five years. They no,v live in Dodge City, Kansas, ·where he is connected with the Luth:er-:McCoy Motor Co. · V-2. vValter Harry Scott B-May 5, 1890, Adams county, Iowa, home farm D--- M-June 30, 1915, Corning, Iowa, Father Richard Dollard officiating Tereca Dowling Child: Anita Marie Scott B-Sept. 29, 1916, Corning, Iowa He graduated from Corning, Iowa, high school, ,vas a student in the Iowa State College of Agriculture at Ames. Assists his father in farming and stock raising. Cashier of Farmers National Bank, Corning, Io,va. Tcrcca Dowling Scott , Wm. F. McCoy Charil's Harold Scott \Valter Uarry Scott Jestlic lVlay (Scott) l\foCoy Clara A. (Darr) Scott Wayne :McCoy Samuel Carter Scott Halph Theodore :\1cCoy Mary E. (Sponsler) Barr Alvin Scott McCoy Family of Sam ucl C. Scott

FAMILY OF SAMUEL C. ScoTT 83

V-.3. Charles Harold Scott B-Dec. 1, 1892, Corning, Iowa D--- M-Dec. 23, 191Z, Corning, Iowa, Rev. Chns. Marshall, Congregational church, officiating Nellie Huff B--- D--- Vl-1. Harold Rockell Scott B-Nov. 30, 1914 Attended the Corning, Iowa, public schools and the business col· lege of Shenandoah, Iowa. Divorce granted l\1arch term of court, 1916.

IV-2. Samuel Carter Scott moved vvith his parents in 1863 from Guernsey county, Ohio, to Mahaska county, lo\va; then to Wapello and Keokuk counties. Immediately after his marriage in 187 5 he moved to a farm in Adams county, Io"va, the home of the family until 1890, \vhen the present ''home farm'' near Corning ,vas purchased and taken possession of. Under the finn name of Sco~t and Biggar he \Vas for a number of years an active partner in the mercantile business in Corning. The general management of his large farm interests (740 acres) about Corning has occupied most of his time in recent years. Stock raising, Black Angus. President of the Farmers National Bank of Corning, of which his son Harry is cashier. Family of Charles A. Scott

\V m. Ripley :Miller Mary Adaline Miller 1 Charles Allen Miller and }{Luella Miller V-1. Daisy May Scott Eva Elizabeth Stair (Died in infancy) I V-2. Lillie Bell Scott V-3. Rosa Maude Scott {V-4. Florence Scott t V-5. Mabel Scott Andre,v Zane Scott / ~ IV-3. Charles Alex- J and · ( antler Scott :Margaret Jane Kendall)

William Ripley :Miller B-Jany. 31, 1836, Grant county, Ind. D-Feb. 12, 1914, Cumberland, Cass Co., Iowa. Funeral Sunday, Feb. 15, 1914, conducted in home by Rev. Breeling. Sermon in Lincoln Center M. E. church by Rev. A. Y. Cupp M-April 17. 1857, Quincy, Adams Co., Iowa Eva Elizabeth Stair B-March 1, 1842, Wabash county, Ind. D-July 24, 1907 Funeral July 26, 1907, 11 A. M. at Lincoln Center M. E. church, con­ ducted by Rev. A. Y. Cupp, assisted by Rev. R. Wyckoff of the United Brethren church

IV-3. Charles Alexander Scott B-Oct. 19, 1850, Guernsey county, Ohio D--.- M-Feb. 21, 1878, Eureka, Adams Co., Rev. A.Y. Cupp, Evangelical church, o:fficiati~g Mary Adeline l\1iller, daughter of Wm. R. and Elizabeth Miller, Adams county, Iowa B--- D--- V-1. Daisy May Scott B-Feb. 28, 1879 D-July 15, 1879 V-2. Lillie Belle Scott B-June 21, 1880 D-.-.- M-Dec. 20, 1899, home, Mt. Etna, Adams Co., Iowa, Rev. Geo. Chew, of United ~rethren church, officiating James Miller Their home is on a farm in Cass County, Io,Ya. P. 0., Cumber­ land, Adams Co., Iowa. V-3. Rosa l\!Iaude Scott B-Aug. 14, 1882 D--­ lVI-Jany. 31, 1906 William Vogel, son of Mr. and :Mrs. Valentine Vogel, Ad­ ams county, Iowa B--- D--- VI-1. Charles Earl Vogel B-Nov. 10, 1907 D--- Vl-2. William Russell Vogel B-Aug. 30, 1909 D--- P. 0., Cumberland, Cass Co., Iowa. Standing- Mabel (Scott) Kemp 1\Iaud (Scott) Vogel Lillie B. (Scott) Miller Florence (Scott) Kimpson Sitting- Charles _.\lexander Scott l\Iary Adeline (:\1iller) Scott Family of Charles A. Scott

FAMILY OF CHARLES ScoTT

V-4. Florence Scott B-Jany. 18, 1885 D--- M-Nov. 1, 1911, at home of bride, Rev. ,v. A. Hollingshead officiating Charles A. Kimpson, Adams county, Io,va B--- D·--- V-5. Mabel Scott B-Feb. 22, 1887 D-,---. M-March 17, 1909, home of bride, Rev. A. Y. Cupp officiating Laurence Kemp, Adams county, Iowa, son of Clarence and Anna (Swinehart) Kemp, Harlan, Shelby Co., Iowa B-April 26, 1884 D--- . P. 0., Mt. Etna, Adams Co., Iowa IV- 3. Charles Alexander Scon at the age of twelve moved with his parents from Ohio to Iowa. Having purchased a farm a few miles from Briscoe, Adams Co., Iowa, he moved on to it immediately: after his marriage, and there they established the home, .later improved, where they now live. He is a successful and prosperous farmer, and . esteemed in the community. P. 0., Mount Aetna, Adams Co., Iowa. Family of Thomas M. Scott

iV-4. Tnomas Mansfield Scott B-Jany. 17, 1852, Guei:nsey oeunty', Ohio D--- M-Feb. 7, 1871, Wapello county, Iowa Sarah Louisa vVyckoff, daughter of Martin N. Wyckoff and r leanor (Piere) vVyckoff B-Sept. 18, 1849, New York City. Later moved to near Katskil_l Moun­ . taios-, New York lV-4. Thomas Mansfield Scott in 1863 moved with his parents from Ohio to Iowa. After his marriage in 1871 he moved to a farm in Wapello cuunty; and in February, 1878, to a farm in Cass county, Iowa~ ln 1904 they moved to Villisca, Iowa, where he engaged in the cattle business. P. 0., Villisca, Iowa, Montgomery county,

V-1. Cora Effie Scott B-Oct. 30, 1871, Wapello county, Iowa D--- 1\:1-0ct. 28, 1891, on the home farm near Massena, Iowa \Villiam J. McVinua, a farmer of l\'1assena, Iowa, son of Ed~ ward McVinua and Augusta 9, Jon.es county, low$ D--- Vl-1. Floyd McVinua B-June 4, 1895 D-June 20, 1895 VI-2. Mildred Augusta Mc Vinua B-Aug. 23, 1896 D-- Vl-3. Claire R. McVinua B-Aug. 30, 1902 D---

V-1. Cora Effie Scott was a teacher in the schools of Cass county prior to her marriage. William F. McVinua, her husband, is a successful farmer. They now reside near Corning, Iowa. P. 0., Corning, Iowa.

V ·-2. Charles William Scott B-Oct. 25, 1873, Wapello county, Iowa D-- M-Oct. 30, 1901, Atlantic, Iowa Nettie J. Pace, daughter of John Woodrow and Susan (Gunter) Pace B-Dec. 27, 1883 D~-- P. 0., Cumberland, Iowa.

V-·2. Charles William Scott was for a number of years a butcher in Cumberland, Iowa. He has a farm near that place, where the family now resides. :Mrs. Rosa Moorehouse, Massena, Ia. Chas. \V. Scott, Cumberland, Ia. A. Z. Scott Cora (Scott) McVinnc Thomas M. Scott Lester W. Scott Sarah Louisa (Wyckoff) Scott

FAMILY oF THOMAS M. ScoTT

· V-3. Andrew Zane Scott B-May 14, 1876 D--- M-Dec. 13, 189-G, Wapello county, Iowa Nellie Bowen, daughter of- George and Elizabeth (Downs) Bowen, Highland Cenrer, W~pello Co., Jowa B-Dec. 21, 1876, Wapello county, Iowa D--- , VI-1. Raymond Verne Scott B-Oct. 19, 1898 D--- VI-2. George Mansfield Scott B - March 19, 1901 D--- VI-3. Olive May Elizabeth Scott B-Jany. 4, 1903. D--- VI-4. Orval Theodore Scott B-N ov. 29, 1904 D--- VI-5. Andre\\!· Earl Scott B-Nov. 15, 1906 D--- VI-6. Vivian Louise Scott B-April 11, 1910, Massena, Iowa D--- Vl-7. ]\1abel Scott B-Nov. 1, 1911 D--- Vl-8. Martha Lucile Scott B-Sept. 2, 1913, Massena, Iowa D--- VI-9. ,iv.. arren Zane Scott B-June 5, 1915 V-3. Andrew Zane Scott is a prosperous farmer. The home is kno,vn as the "Evergreen Farm", and is located two miles north of Massena, Iovva. V-4. Dora Rosine Scott B-May 6, 1879, Cass county, Iowa D--- M-Nov. 28, 1900, Massena, Cass Co., Iowa, Rev. Rawls, M. E. church, of Bridgewater, officiating John Orrie Moorehouse, son of Lemuel E. and Etta (Bruce) Moorehouse B-July 9; 1878, Marion county, Iowa D--- Vl-1. Cecil Leon Moorehouse B-Dec. 12, 1901, Massena, Iowa D--- Vl--2. Floyd Auburn Moorehouse B-Dec. 3, 1903, Cumberland, Cass Co., Iowa D--- , V-4. Dora R. (Scott) Moorehouse graduated from the Massena high school and became a public school teacher in Cass county. 88 FAMILY OF THOMAS 1\.1. ScoTT

V-5. Thomas Martin Scott B-April 20, 1885 D-July 8, 1885 V-6. Lester vValton Scott B-Nov. 1, 1886, Gass county, Iowa D--- . M-March 24, 1909, Villisca, Iowa Maude Moritz, foster daughter of Mr. and Mrs. T. J. \V right, of Villisca, Iowa B--- D--- VI-1. . Marjorie Alice Scott B-April 11, 1911 D-March 2, 1912 V-·6. Lester Walt6'n Scott was educated in the Villisca, Iowa, schools where he graduated from the high school. He was a traveling salesman, having for his territory the states of Kansas, Montana, and Washington. He is now in the mercantile business in Villisca, Iowa. Family of Zeb Scott IV-5. Zeb Scott B-March 24, 1854, Guernsey county; Ohio D--- 1\,1-Dec. 31, 1879, Concordia, Kansas, Rev. G. v:. Woods, M. E. church of Concordia, officiating Mary M. Calvert, daughter of Israel and Mar:~-,h (Kackley) Calvert of vVinchester, Va. B-June 11, 1856, near Capon bridge near Winchest 0 r, W. Va. D-March 15, 1915, on the home farm near Burr Oak, Jewel Co., Kans. V-1. Calvert C. Scott B-Nov. 9, 1880, Scandia, Republic Co., l{atJ:3. D--- lVI-March 20, 1904, Burr Oak, Kans., Rev. J. Lehman, German Evan- gelical church. officiating · Effie l\tfiller, daughter of Anthony M. Gnd Martha (Morris) :Miller, Tuscaroras county, Ohio, now of Burr Oak, Kans. B-Sept. 29, 1882, Gilmore, Tuscaroras Co., C-1.io D--- Vl-1. Orville Scott B-Oct. 13, 1906 D--- VI -- 2. Orpha Scott B-March 17, 1908 D--- Vl-3. Waldo Calvert Scott B-Dec. 24, 1914, Burr Oak, Kans. D--- V-2. Dessie A. Scott B-Oct.17, 1882, Republic county, Kans., near Scandia D--- . M-April 3, 1904, on home farm near Burr Oak, Kans., Rev. J.C. Walker, M. E. church, officiating Charles Lloyd, Champaign county, Illinois B--- D--- VI-1. Glen Lloyd B-Dec. 12, 1905 D--- Charles Lloyd is a d~aler in livestock, Superi.)r, Nebr. V-3. Hugh Cyrus Scott B-Nov. 29, 1889 (Twin) D--- . M-Feb. 26, 1914, Burr Oak, Kans., Rev. J.C. Walker officiating Blanche E. Lamb, daughter of J. C. and Chloe (Church) Lamb B-Jany. 11, 1890 D--- Vl-1.- Dorothea Aileen Scott B-Jany. 4, 1917 D--- V-4. Ho,vard Thomas Scott B-Nov. 29, 1889 (Twin) D--- 1\1-June 26, 1912, Nortbbranch, Kans., Rev. John Hadley, Presbyter­ ian church, uncle of the bride, Central l ity, Nebr., officiating . · Minnie Estella Craven, Je,vel county, Kans., daughter of Jacob L. and -- (Hadley) Craven B-Sept. 13, 1889 D--- 90 F AMIL y OF ZEB SCOTT

VI-1. D )yle Leonard Scott B-Oct. 21, 1913 D--- VI-2. Dale Calvert Scott B-March 23, 1916 IV-5. Zeb Scott moved with his parents from (!Guernsey county, Ohio, to Wapello county, Iowa, when he was nine years of age. He lived in Iowa fifteen years. He then went to Kansas and was married in that state the following -year. For three years he lived near Scandia, Kans., and then purchased the present home near Burr Oak, Kans. He has prospered in farming and stock raising. p. ·O., Burr Oak; Jewel Co., Kans. Dcs.-·ic A. (8rntt) Lloyd l\lary i\f. (C'alvcrt) Scott Calvert C Scott lI ugh C. Scott ¼ebb Scott liowurd T. Scott

Family of Benjamin F. Harkins IV---8. Annis Scott B-Feb. 14, 1859, Guernsey county, Ohio D--- M-July 12, 1877, Ottumwa, Iowa, by Judge Lockspeach Benjamin F. Harkins, a farmer of \Vapello county, Iowa B-Aug. 17, 1854 - D-April, 1899, Wyoming V-1. Ollie R. Harkins B-AprilD.:.__ __ 8, 1878 M-Dec. 25, 1898, on home farm near Mankato, Jewel Co., Kans., Rev. Andrew PoEien, United Brethren church, officiating Willard Ransom B-Marcb 9, 1877, Jewel county, Kans. D-- Vl-1. Luseta Ransom B-Oct. 14, 1899 D-Feb. 9, 1900 VI-2. Harold Ransom B-June 14, 1902 D--- VI-3. Anni 5 Irene Ransom B-Nov. 4, 1911 D--- Vl-4. Doris Marie Ransom B-July 5, 1912 D--- V-2. I ennie Harkins B-Feb. 9, 1880 D-- M-l\.fay I, 1898, Mankato, Kans. Howard Ayers, son of Joseph and Mary (Russell) Ayers of Ohio B-N ov. 10, 1880, Iowa D--- Vl-1. Hazel Ayers B-Dec. 14, 1899 D--- -VI-2. Neva Ayers B-Aug. 31, 1901 D--- Vl-3. Luvern Ayers B-March 17, 1906 D--- V -3. Stella Harkins B-July 6, 1883 D--- M-June 9, 1906, Mankato, Kans. Harvey Murphy, son of Benjamin and Emma May (Adam• son) Murphy, of Burr Oak, Kans. B-Sept. 14, 1889, l\farshall county, Iowa D--- VI-1. Goldia Grace lWurphy B-April 16, 1910 D--- V-4. _Jasper I. Harkins B-Sept. 8, 1885 D--- M-April 15, 1908 · 92 FAMILY OF BENJAMIN F. HARKINS

Chloe Alspaugh, Indiana, daughter of Moses and Nettie (--) Alspaugh B-Jany. 17, 1894 D--- VI-1. Zerna Wain Harkins B-Sept. 14, 1916, Mankato, Kans. Jasper Harkins lived on a farm in eastern Colorado for five years! then returned to Kansas. V-5. William Z. Harkins B-March 3, 1888 D--- M-July 14, 1912, Otego, Jewel Co., Kans., Rev. Tinker of M. E. . church officiating Mabel Rogers, daughter of William and Maud (---) Rog­ ers, Indiana B-Feb. 19, 1892 D--- Vl-1. Richard Zane Harkins B-Feb. 18, 1914 -William Z. Harkins lives on a farm near Otego, Kans. V-6. Clifford H. Harkins B-June 9; '1891 D--- M-Feb. 16, 191-0, Hedrick, Iowa· Dessie Hamilton, Hedrick, Io,va, daughter of John and --- (Rhinehart) Hamilton, near Hedrick, Io,va B-Jany. 19, 1892 D--- Vl-. 1. Donald Benjamin Harkins B-Aug. 17, 1911 D--- Vl-2. Dorothy Harkins B-Sept. 17, 1912 D--- Vl-3. John Cecil Harkins B-Oct. 4, 1914 D--- V-7. Lydia J. Harkins B-Aug. 3, 1893 D--- M-Oct. 15, 1912 Daniel Holzhauser, farmer near· Hedrick, Iowa, son of \,V m. and Theresia (Ritter) Holzhauser B-J uly 6, 1886 . D--- Vl-1. Harold Vail Holzhauser B-July 19, 1913 VI-2. Mildred Lucile Holzhauser B-Dec. 8, 1915 V-8. Goldia A. Harkins B-Jany. 21, 1897, near Mankato, Kans. D--- Lives with her mother in Mankato, Kans. V-9. Luessa Harkins B-Nov. 26, 1886 D-Feb. 22. 1887 Stella (HarkinEi) Murphy - Jennie (Harkins) Ayers . Clifford H. Harkins \Villiam Z. Harkins Ollie R. (Harkins) Ransom Jasper J. Burkins Mrs. Annis (Scott) Harkins Lydia J. (Harkins) Holzhauser Goldia A. Harkins

FAMILY OF BENJAMIN F. HARKINS 93

IV-8. .Annis (Scott) Harkins and twin sister Alice (Scott) Chap­ man were born Feb. 14, 1859, Guernsey county, Ohio.. The parents moved in 1863 to Iowa, and ljved on a farm in Wapello county. Her husband, Benjamin F. Harkins, farmed in Wapello and Cass counties, Iowa, fot eight years, then purchased a farm near l\tfankato, Kans., where they made the home, vvhich is still ovvned, and near which, with one exception, all the children live. In 1899 Mr. Harkins, because of failing health, took a trip \vest hoping to regain his health. From Gillette in Wyoming he walked out one day, was overtaken by a storm with which he was too weak to battle. Overcome, he sat down, wrote a note of his condition and a farewell to loved ones. Though search was made for weeks the body was not found. Seven years afterward the skeleton and clothing were found. In the pocket was the pathetic note of ''lost''. After the death of her father in 1907 Mrs. Annis (Scott) Harkins with her three youngest children went to the home of her mother in Hedrick, Iowa, where she gave tender care for three years to the aged mother. She then returned to her ovvn home near Mankato, Kans. Family ·of Andrew S. Chapman

IV-9. Alice Scott B-Feb. 14, 1859, twin sister to Annis, Guernsey county, Ohio D--- . M-Aug. 8, 1878, Wapello county, Iowa Andrew Spitser Chapman, son of Samuel and Polly (Jones) Chapman of Virginia B-Jany. 1, 1854, Licking county, Ohio D--- V-1. William Bert Chapman B-Nov. 8, 1879; near Ottumwa, Iowa D--- M-July 27, 1898, Atlantic, Cass Co., Iowa Della Basor, daughter of David Basor B-1877, l\fassena, Iowa D--- Vl---1. Clarence Chapman B-Jany. 1, 1899 D-A pril 2, 1899 VI -2. Pearl Chapman B-Dec. 26, 1900 D--- William B. Chapman resides 2534 Fort Street, Omaha, Nebr. V-2. Carrie Margaret Chapman B-April 1, 1881, near Massena, Iowa D--- M-Aug. 29, 1898, Rev. Campbell officiating Fred Allen, Creston, Iowa, a carpenter by trade, son of Calvin· and Mary (---) Allen of Creston, Iowa B-Aug. 17, 1880, Illinois D--- Vl-4. Amos LeRoy Allen B-Jtily 29, 1899 D-Oct. 15, 1899 VI-2. Lloyd Allen B-March 18, 1901 D--- Vl-3. Ade C. Allen B-April 7, 1903 D---. VI-4. Harold Andrew Allen · B-May 22, 1£05 D--- Vl-5. Goldia May Allen B-Aug. 4, 1908 D--- Vl-6. Alice May Allen B-June 15, 1910 D--- V-3. Henry L. Chapman B-Feb. 4, 1883 D--- M-Dec. 8, (~9 Hattie Garey of Grant, Io,va, daughter of Louis and Cora Garey, Villisca, Iowa B-Sept. 27, 1890, Grant, Iowa D--- Standing, Bnck- Amos L. Chapman Henry L. Chapman Charles A. Chapman Secon

FAMILY OF .i\NDREW S. CHAPMAN 95

VI-1. Dorothy Darline Chapman D,_B-Sept.__ 19, 1910 VI-2. Bonnie Chapman B-April 11, 1914 D--- VI-3. Claud Chapman B-Dec. 1, 1915 D--- Henry L. Chapman lives 810 Hickory Street, Atlantic, Iowa V-4. Rose Anna Chapman B-Nov. 15, 18&5, near Atlantic, Iowa. D--- M-Sept. 12, 1905, Cumberland, Cass Co., Iowa lv1artin Bicking, farmer near Cumberland, Iowa B--- D-Oct. 13, 1914, Perry, Oklahoma VI-1. Alice Margarite Bicking B-July 27, 1906, Cumberland, Iowa D--- Vl-2. Ohera A. Bicking B-May 27, 1909 D-- Vl-3. Myrtle May Bicking B-June 5, 1911 D--- P. 0., Sioux Falls, S. Dakota V-5. Charles Arthur Chapman B-Aug. 21, 1888 D-- M-March 13, 1912, Anita, Iowa, Rev. Spiller officiating Viola Templeman, daughter of Wm. and Ollie (Durham) Templeman B-Dec. 25, 1894, Cumberland, Iowa D-.:,__ VI-1. Bernadine Chapman B-July 16, 1913 D-- P. 0., Cartridge, Mo. V-6. Harry Ivan Chapman B-Jany.14, 1890, near Harvard, Nebr. D--- M-March 10, 1911, Anita., Iowa, Rev. Spiller officiating Elizabeth Stougton VI-L Edith Marie Chapman B-Jany. 28, 1912 D--- . VI-2. Ethel Chapman B-April 5, 1914 D--- V-7. :Myrtle M. Chapman B-July 3, 189 2 D--- M-Der.. 31, 1914, Anita, Iowa, Rev. Hosier officiating William Richter B-Aug., 1892 96 FAMILY OF ANDREW S. CHAPMAN

V-8. Amos L. Chapman B-Sept. 4, 1894 D--- 1\1-Sept. 12, 1914, Atlantic, Iowa Edna Schweinicher VI-1. Kenneth LeRoy Chapman B-.Tuly 7, 1915 D--- V-9. Daisy S. Chapman B-March 16, 1896 D--- M-Jany. 12, 1916, Anita, Iowa, Rev. Schweick officiating Peter Schweinicher, Adair, Adair Co., Iowa . V-10. Jesse A. Chapman B-Aug. 17, 1899 D--- Andre\V s~ Chapman, after his· marriage to Alice Scott, lived for five years in Kansas and Nebraska; since then on a farm near Anita, Cass Co., Iowa. To this union ten children were born, and all are living. P. 0., Anita, Cass Co .. , Iowa. Family of William Scott

IV-11. William Scott _ B-Aug. 3, 1863, near Fremont, Mahaska Co., Iowa D--- M-Dec. 5, 1883, at home of bride, Rev. E. P. Michener, M. E. church, Fremont, officiating Ida Thompson, daughter of Thomas Jefferson and Nancy (Kit­ terman) Thompson B-Nov. 19, 1863, Highland Center, Wapello Co., Iowa D--- Thomas Jefferson Thompson was b July 24, 1832, :Morgan county, Ind., and d June 8, 1911. Nancy (Kitterman) Thompson was b Jany. 28, 1834, Perry county, Ind., and d July 5, 1906, Highland Center, Iowa V-1. Daughter B-Oct. -, 1884 D-Oct. 19, 1884 V-2. Glenn Arlo Scott B-March 12, 1886, Brisco, Cass Co., Iowa D--- l\1-Feb. 15, 1912, Bedford, Iowa, Rev. Thompson, M. E. church, offi- ciating · Oral Ella Moore, daughter of Green Berry and Mary Etta (Ogden) Moore of Gravity, Taylor Co., Iowa B-Aug. 25, 1892, Gravity, Iowa D--.- Vl-1. Jesse V erle Scott B-Sept. 1, 1913, Gravity, Iowa D--- . P. 0., R. F. D. No. 3, Bedford, Iowa V-3. Dora Myrtle Scott B-Feb. 11, 1888, near Massena, Iowa D--- M-Dec. 2, 1909, Massena, Iowa Raymond Porter, son of William and Sarah Porter, Massena B-June 16, 1884, Massena, Iowa D--- Vl-1. Eulah Irene Porter B-March 23, 1912, Fountanelle, Iowa D--- VI-2. ,Villiam Earl Porter B-July 29, 1915, Gravity, Taylor Co., Iowa D--- P. 0., R. F. D. No. 2, Gravity, Taylor Co., Iowa V-4. Thomas Andrew Scott B-Oct. 22, 1890, Cass county, Iowa D-- M-March 12, 1913, !vl. E. parsonage, Bedford, Iowa, Rev. W. F. Thompson officiating Ruby Chloe McFarland, daughter of John ,Villiam and l\linnie Sophia {Livingston) McFarland of Gravity, Adams Co., Io,va B-Sept. 14, 1894, Page county, Iowa D--- Vl-1. Mildred Scott B-Nov. 12, 1915, Taylor county, Iowa D--- P. 0., Gravity, Taylor Co., Iowa 98 FAMILY OF WILLIAM SCOTT

V-5. l\ilaggie Ethel Scott B-Feb. 19, 1893 D--·- V-6. Pearl Hazel Scott B-Feb. 17, 1895, Massena, Iowa D--- • M-March 15, 1914, Gravity, Iowa, by Rev. Carder ; Har,ry Alonzo Livingston, son of Reuben and Harriet (--) : Livingston, Clarinda, Iowa . , ' ~:o---· B-July 19, 1893, Clarinda, Iowa Reuben Livingston was b Jany. 18, 1859, Illinois, and Harriet ., ..- ..-·was b J_uly 24, 1869, Clarinda, Page Co., Iowa. They were . m ,._ .Dec.. 2~, --. Rev; Smitb·officiating V-.:.-7. Millie Ruby Scoh · B~Jany. 24, 1900 P--~- . . ' v-· s. Nancy Gladys Scott B_.:_April 28, 1903 .. , .D--- . .. ·V-9. Verna Letha Scott . B-Feb. 20, 1907 D-- JV-11. William Scott after marriage moved to Cass county, Iowa. In 1910 he purchased a farm near Gravity, Taylor county, where the family now resides. He is known as one of the progressive and pros­ perous farmers of that county. He is a member and an officer in the Methodist church. Gladys Scott Gk•nn A. Scott William Scott Ida (Thompson) Scott Thomas A. Scott Millie R. Scott Dora M. (Scott) Porter Verna L. Scott Pearl H. (Scott) Livingston l\I. Ethel Scott

Family of Marion Sammons IV-12. Mary Susan Scott B-Feb. 25, 1866, Mahaska county, Iowa D--- M-Feb. 18, 1885, Wapello county, by Rev. J. W. McFaddin of Fremont, Ia. Marion Sammons of Union county, Iowa, son of Peter and Pru­ dence (Mullennix) Sammons. Farm home is six miles from Creston, Iowa B-Jaoy. 18, 1863 D--- V -1. Blanche Sammons B-Nov. 26, 1835, Union county, Iowa D---- M-March 20, 1907, Kent, Union Co., Iowa Victor Ericksen, son of John W. and Sophia (Samuelson} Ericksen B-Jany. 9, 1876, Union county, Iowa D--- Vl-1. Vera Lorene Ericksen B-Nov. 28, 1909, Union county D--- VI-2. John Wayne Ericksen B-May 18, 1915, Union county, Iowa D--- V-1. Blanche (Sammons) Ericksen was educated in the Corning, Iowa, academy, and the Iowa State Teachers' College at Cedar Falls. She was a public school teacher until her marriage. V1ictor Ericksen, her husband, is a farmer and lives on his own farni near Lorimer, Iowa .. V-2. Ernest Sammons, a farmer near Creston, Iowa B-Jany. 4, 1888 D--- M-Feb. 18, 1914, Union county, Iowa, by Rev. J. W. Parks, Congre­ gational church Etha Manatrey, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Manatrey B-July 31, 1894, Adams county, Iowa D--- V-- 3. Mabel Sammons B-Aug. 18, 1889, Union county, Iowa D--- M-June 8, 1910, Uniou county, Iow::i. Lloyd Drorbaugh, now of Salem, Ort!g., son of Archibald _M. and Ellen Drorbaugh B-Aug. 19. 1888 D--- Vl-1. Margery L. Drorbaug·h B-Oct. 10, 1913, Turner, Oregon D--- V-3. Mabel (Sammons) Drorbaugh attended the Iowa State Teachers' College, Cedar Falls, and taught in the vicinity of Creston prior to her marriage. The family resides. in Salem, Oregon. V-4. Ethel Prudence Sammons B-April 30, 1892, Union county, Iowa D--- V-5. Marion Roy Sammons B-Aug. 29, 1894, Union county, Iowa D-- IOO FAMILY OF MARION SAMMONS

V-6. Viola May Sammons B-July 24, 1898, Union county, Iowa D--- V-7. Opal Fern Sammons B-Aug. 18, 1904, Union county, Iowa D--- Marion Sammons is a prosperous farmer. P. 0., R. F. D. No. 2, Kent. Union Co., Iowa. Ethel Sammons Mrs. V. L. Erickson Roy Sammons Ernest Sammons Viola Sammons Mrs. Lloyd Drorbaugh :Marion Summons Ji'ernc Sammons M. Susan (Scott) Sammons

Family of U. Grant Scott

IV-13. Ulysses Grant Scctt B-July 15, 1867,·Reokuk county, Iowa D--- M-Oct. 30, 1890, Ottumwa, Iowa Nannie Humphreys, daughter of Samuel and Emeline (Laud­ man) Humphreys B-Jany. 15, 1869 D--- V-1. Rata Jane Scott B-July 19, 1891, Wapello county, Iowa ("old home") D--- M-Nov. 8, 1910, near Chillicothe, Iowa Gus Abernathy B-Feb. 15, 1890 D--- VI-1. Vantalla May Abernathy B-Feb. 13, 1912 D--- V-2. Reva Luella Scott B-J une 22, 1895 D--- M-Oct. 30, HH5, Ottumwa, Iowa Harry L. Mason B-March 3, 1891 D--- .. V-3. Snowden Andrew Scott B-June 25, 1903 D---. V-4. Cecil Cavender Scott B-June 14, 1905 D--- IV-13. Ulysses Grant Scott, for twelve ye.a.rs after his marriage, lived on the parental homestead. . He later lived in Cass county two years, then returned to \i\7 apello county and purchased a farm near Chillicothe which he still owns. Since 1910 he has lived in Ottumw·a, lovva. Famiiy of L. C. Humphreyg

IV-·14. J.\'1argaret Jane Scott B-Oct. 25, 1871, Wapello county, lowa D--- M-March 23; 1893 L. C. Humphreys, son of Samuel and Emeline Humphreys B-July 22, 1870 D--- V-1. Bertha Humphreys :8-Sept. 11, 1894 D---

M--:--March 8, 1915 1 Ottumwa, Iowa Cleo M. Mc.New, son of J. 1\1. and Mary (Smith) McNew B-July 31, 1895 D--- Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Humphreys lived for a time in Wapello and Keokuk counties. For ten years they occupied the ''old home'' farm. They now live in Fremont, Mahaska county, Iowa, where he is GOn ... ducting an automobile business. P. 0., Fremont, lo\.va. Family of Wilson Scott

111-10. v\i~ilson Scott B-April 8, 1831, Washington county, Pa. D-Feb. 21, 1911. in Spokane, Wash., of sarcoma of liver · M-Aug 16, 1855, in Ca.mbridge, Ohio, by Rev. Maynard Margaret M. Tingle, daughter of Joseph Dunlap and Catherine (Thomas) Tingle B-Sept. 12, 1834. Norwich, Ohio D-Dec. 5, 1899. Spokane, Wash., of apoplexy. :\-Ir. and Mrs. Scott are buried side by side in the family lot, Fairmount cemetery, Spokane, Wash. Children: IV-1. Joseph Tingle Scott . IV-5. Eugenia Scott IV-2. Alma McCulloch Scott IV-6. Leila Scott IV-3. Katherine Thomas Scott IV-7. Fannie Miller Scott IV-4. DeElla Anna Scott Wilson Scott was a man of a happy, genial nature, vvho made friends and retained them. When a young man he made a trip across the mountains, accompanied by his brother and a nephew, in the search for gold, members of a large company or train . .l\,,fr. Scott \Vas appointed to the raihvay mail service in January, 1877, on the 'Pittsburgh & St.· Louis R. P. 0., running from Indianapolis, Ind., to Pittsburgh, Pa., where he served three and one-half years. He was then, at his own request, transferred to the Grafton & Chicago R. P. 0., ·west division, performing service on that line for seven years, \Vhen a ·wave of ''reform'' swept over the country, and being of a different po­ litical faith from the party then in po\ver his removal from the servic'e followed. After an absence of twenty months from the service he was reinstated May 30, 1899, and assigned to the Toledo & Marietta R. P. 0., afterward changed to the Cleveland & Marietta R. P. 0. In September, 1892, he made application for and was transferred to the Eighth division, being assigned to the Marcus &_ Spokane R. P. 0. He was aftenvard transferred to the Spokane & Coulee City, then the Couer d'Alene & Spokane & Pullman & Genesee R. P. 0., being given lighter runs each change as the years advanced. After spending thirty years of his life and traveling 500,000 miles in the service of Uncle Sam, at the age of 76, he having attained the distinction of being the oldest R. P. 0. clerk both in point of age and service, he sent ·in his resignation which \Vas accepted Nov. 1, 1907. The ''Railway Post Office'', the official organ of the postal clerks, in speaking of his resignation said: ''vVilson Scott might vvell be termed 'one of the grand old men', a man that is respected by all \,' ho kn-0w him, and to know him is to love him; a devout Christian, and an ex­ ample of a long.life \,Vell spent.'' 0 Mrs. Scott was active in _church \,Vork from early girlhood until the time of her death, and devoted much of her time to charity, especial_ly to aged and sick \Vomen, of \vhom there were a number that she looked after constantly. She \Vas a deaconess in the church for a number of years prior to her death. 104 FAMILY ·oF W rL&ON ScoTT

They were members of the c·ongregational church in Spokane:, Wash., in which he had been an officer for a number of -years. · A beautiful m1rble baptistry in mem::>ry of their p1re:1ts was placed by the children, after his death, in the front of the chu:-ch the p_arents had attended. IV-1. Joseph Tingle Scott B-June 24, 1856, on the ''old homestead" three miles east of Cambridge Ohio, on the old National (pike) road D-Nov. 28. 1915, Coeur d'Alene, Idaho M-May 8, 1884, at Wheeling, W. Va., by Rev. Geo. Hite Kate M. Dunlevy, daughter of V\iilliam and Margaret Dunlevy B-Feb. 5, 1862, Wheeling, W. Va. D--- Mr. Scott resided in Cambridge, Ohio, until 1882, when he fol­ lovved Horace Greeley's advice to go west, and he located in Glendive, Montana. In the spring of 1883 he lo~ated in Dickenson, N. D., and estab­ lished the Dickenson Press. · He was publisher and editor of the Dick­ enson paper until June, 1891, when he sold the property and moved to Spokane and engaged in the grocery business. After a year's residence in Spokane, he yiel_ded to the call of the newspaper business, going to Coeur d'Alene, and established in February, 1892, the Couer d'Alene Weekly Press, of ·which, together with the Evening Press, ,.vhich he established August 6, 1906, he was sole proprietor and editor up to the time of his death. He always took an active part in political affairs, voting \\~ith the Re­ publican party, representing his district at the first state convention of his party in North Dakota, when he \Vas a resident of that state. In 1900 he was elected to the Idaho legislature on the Silver Republican ticket, his term of office expiring in 1902. He w2.s one of the public spirited citizens of the town, in t\le development of which his paper was a pror:-:­ inent factor, its columns being freely used for the support of every mo.,~e­ ment that meant the betterment of local cond1tions. The Evening Press of November 29, 1915, said: Joseph T. Scott died last evening at 10 o'clock at the family residence, 512 Coeur d'Alene Avenue. Hardening of the arteries in the region of the heart was the direct .cause of death. His end was a peaceful one. He was fully conscious up to the last moment. Died .as He Had Lived, Bravely-Mr. Scott had suffered two comparatively mild attacks-on last Sunday and on Thanksgiving evening. He recovered from these ,vithout difficulty, and follo,ving each of the attacks ·he ,vas able to be at his office, apparently feeling in normal condition. The third and very violent attack made its appearance early Saturday morning. From that time on the attending physicians could offer very little encouragement to look for recov­ ery, but until Sunday mornin·g- his condition was such as to \varrant at least some hope for his recovery. A fe\V. minutes before he died he asked the physician if there was anything more that could. be done for him. Reluctantly the physician replied that there appeared to be nothing. "Then I'll turn over and go to sleep", he said. And looking at his loved ones gathered in the room, he said "Good night, all". Quietly and peacefully he breathed his last. Hon. Joseph T. Scott

Margaret M. (Tingle) Scott

FAMILY OF WILSON ScoTT 105

The Press of December 4, 1915, said: Friends Pay Last Tribute to Editor Joseph T. Scott-Stores and Banks Closed During Funeral Hour-Fraternal Organizations Participate in Service­ Large attendance of Resident and Visiting People. The mortal remains of Joseph T. Scott, founder, publisher, and editor of the Coeur d'Alene \iVeekly and Evening Press, ,vere placed in their last resting place in Forest cemetery. At the re:,idence Rev. T. G. Hodgson, a pioneer Methodist minister and long­ time friend of l\1r. Scott and his family, read a selection from the scriptures, and offered prayer. His editorial in the Press of May 11, 1915, soon after the Lusitania went do\vn, and with it hundreds of lives, was on the words of Charles Frohman, one who perished, but calmly said: ''Why fear death? It is the most beautiful adventure in life''. IV-2. Alma lVIcCulloch Scott B-March 5, 1858, ai the "old homestead" near Cambridge, Ohio . Places of residence: Cambridge, Ohio, till 1892; Genesee, Idaho, three years; Spokane, Wash., 2319 l\1allon Ave. She ,vas for a number of years connected with the millinery de­ partment of one of the large department stores of Spokane, \Vash. IV-3. Katherine Thomas (Scott) '"1" elch B-Feb. 4, 186::>, Guernsey ~ounty, Ohio. In 1899 she moved to Spokane, Wash. l\i-~ov. 25, 1897, in S;>okane, ,vash., by Rev. F. B. Cherrington Thomas Robert Welch, son of Thomas and Sarah (Bates) \Velch B-Feb. 22, 1861, Batesville, Independence Co., Ark. At the age of 16 years he went to Portland, Oreg.; later to Fort Worth, Tex., then to Reardon, Wa~h.; after that to Northport, Wash., \Vhere he conducted a drug store for a number of years. In 1907 h~ sold his drug store and moved to Los Angeles, Calif., where he is· en­ gaged in the drug business. The present address is 223N, Ave. 61, Los Angeles, Calif. IV-4. DeElla Anna (Scott) Blanchatd B-Jany. 29, 1862, Guernsey county, Ohio. In July, 1892, she moved to Spo­ kane, Wash. l\!-Dec. 31, 190'.?, Spokane, Wash., by Rev. Geo. R. Wallace Ed,vard C. Blanchard,. son of John C. and Abbie Blanchard B-Feb. 14, 1869, Peacham, Vt. In 1889 moYe

At the age of four moved ,vith his parents to Tama county, Iowa. In 1883 went to North Dakota, and from there in 1888 to Spokane, \,\,... ash. Engaged in real estate and mining business, operating several mining properties in British Columbia. Of­ fice, 622 Old National Bank Building, Spokane, Wash. Resi­ dence, 2003 \Vest 10th Ave., Spokane. Children: V-1. Harry Wilson Beckett B-Jany. 23, 1891, Spokane, Wash. Graduated from Spokane high school in January, 1911. January 1911 to August 1911 ·worked for the Hobson Sil­ ver-Lead Company, Ainsworth. B. C. September 1911 ente"red the University of California at Berkeley. May 1912 went to work developing a mining property near Slocan City, B. C., in which he holds a tenth interest. Preferring the practical to the theoretical, he continued his ·work. His address is ·s1ocan City, B. C. · V-2. Ralph Ed,vin Beckett B-Sept. 19, 1892, Spokane, Wash. A graduate of Spokane high school with the class of 1911. In August 1911 entered the University of California at Berkeley, to graduate ·with Class 1915 from the depart- ment of architecture as. an architectural engineer. · IV-7. Fannie Miller (Scott) Belt B-Feb. 11, 1876, Cambridge, Ohio. In September, 1892, moved from Ohio to Spokane, Wash. M-June 19, 1902, in Spokane, Wash., by Rev. G. R. Wallace Horatio Celsus Belt, son of Horace N. and :Martha Tipton Belt B-Sept. 15, 1875, near Jerseyville, Jersey Co., Ill. ln 1887 Mr. Belt moved with his parents_ from Jersey county, Ill., to Spokane, \'\Tash., where he resided'until 1904, when he moved to Seattle, \Vash., where he is one of the rising attor­ neys of that western metropolis. Mrs. Horatio Celsus Belt is a graduate in Class June 1894, of Spokane high school. She entered the state normal school at Ellensburg, vVash., from which she graduated hvo years later. She then took the kindergarten train.ing and taught one year in Bruno Hall Kindergarten, and in the ·-public schools, after ,vhich she was employed as primary teacher in the Spokane public schoois untii the time of her _marriage. Their residence is 414 16th Ave. North, Seattle, Wash. lVIr .. and Mrs. H. C. Belt are active in social circles and belong to the Seatile or l\ilt. Ranier club. They have made ascents of different mountains. The Belt Family

Horatio Nelson Belt 1 . b 1794, Virginia I f · d 1870, Jersey Co.,111. r \ Horatio Nelson Belt. m .Tune, 1822 I b Oct. 1, 1841, Jersey Mary West J . Co., Ill. b Mar. 8, 1806, S.Car. d Aug. 22, 1900, Spo-

Co., Ill. m Dec. 16, 1869 b Sept. 15, 1875, :Bphraim Tiptoh ) Jersey Co., Ill. b Maryland t_J William Webster_ l m June 19, 1902 m 1810, to I Tipton · f J Mary Webster J b Feb. 25, 1811, Mary-~ \ I\fartba Jane Tipton b Maryland land I \ b Sept. 23, 1846,Perry Fannie Miller d 1886, Illinois Co,, Ohio (Living) Scott William Ramsey m 1836 b Maryland R arriet Ramsey J mto } { b 1819, Maryland Martha Jane d Oct., 1854, Ohio McVey b· Maryland

Children of Horatio Celsus Belt and Fannie Scott Belt: Donald Celsus Belt-b April 19, 1914. Adopted Nov. 30, 1914 Dorothy Belt-b April 19, 1914. Adopted Nov. 30, 1914 Family of George W. Brown

111-11. Sarah Jane (Scott) Brown B-J un e 8, 1833, Washington county, Pa. D-Feb. 5, 1910, Senecaville, Ohio, from Cancer. Buried in Senecaville, Ohio M-April 29, 1852, at "old homestead" east of Cambridge, Ohio George Washington Brown B-March 7, 1828 Pittsburgh, Pa. D-Dec. 1, 1909, of diseases incident to old age. Buried in Senecaville, Ohio Children: IV-l. Cyrus James Brown IV -- 6. Emma Bro,vn IV-2. Eva Brown IV-7. i\ ary Brown IV - 3. \iVilliam Alexander Brown IV-8. Walter Ross Brown IV-4. Jessie Brown IV-9. Martha Brown IV-5. Charles Scott Brown IV-10. George Arthur Brown Geo. W. Brown grew up as clerk in the store of Old Father Stran:.. athan. For fifty and more years in Senecaville, Ohio, he conducted a large and prosperous business of his own. He was interested also in farming, sheep raising, and fruit growing, and owned several fine farms. He was faithful to his church and interested in the public moral welfare, giving liberally for every good cause. Mrs. Brown was a lovable, · Christian mother and neighbor, known for her good works and charities. · Their home was the resting place for the ''itinerant preacher''. IV-1. Cyrus James Brown B-Feb. 16, 1853, Senecaville, Ohio D-April 5, 1898, in Columbus, Ohio, from brain disease resulting from be­ coming overheated at "a fire", the burning of a neighbor's house. Bur­ ied at Senecaville, Ohio. Occupation, a merchant. M-Jany. 15, 1885, in Senecaville, by Rev. Newton Donaldson Rosetta Jester, daughter of Thomas and Mahaley Jester B-Sept. 12, 1857, Senecaville, Ohio D--- One child: V-1. Jessie Brown B-Nov. 23, 1890, Senecaville, Ohio. Resides in Senecaville, Ohio IV-2. Eva Brown B-March 10, 1855, Sene~aville, Ohio D-April 3, 1855, Senecaville, Ohio IV-3. William Alexander Brown B-March 16, 1856, Senecaville, Ohio D-Oct. 29, 1912, locomotor ataxia. For ten years was unable to walk. Oc­ cupation, merchant M-May 11, 1893, Senecaville, Ohio, by Rev. Alonzo B. Shaw Mary Shaw, daughter (. f William and Eliza Sha"? B-Oct. 9, 1862, Senecaville, Ohio D--- Children: V-1. \Valter Brown B-Dec. 23, 1895, Senecaville, Ohio D--- V-2. Ed ward Brown B-March 9, 1898, Senecaville, Ohio D--- Resides in Senecaville, Ohio George ·w. Brown Sarah Jane (Scott) Brown 1S28-1909 1833-1910

FAMILY OF GEORGE w. BROWN 109 IV-4. Jessie Brown B-June 10, 1858, Senecaville, Ohio D-May 29. 1883, Senecaville, Ohio, of spinal trouble. Buried in Senecaville, Ohio IV-5. Charlie Scott Bro,vn~ a hardware merchant B-Oct. 19, 1861, Senecaville, Ohio D--- M-Feb. 12, 1885, in Beverly, Wa~hington Co., Ohio, by Rev. Frank Fast Marth~ Josephine Bozman, daughter of James and Ann 'lVatson Bozman B-Dec. 29, 1862, Sharon, Noble Co., Ohio D--- Residence is in Senecaville, Ohio Children: V-1. Archie Bozman Bro·wn B-Nov. 21, 1886, Senecaville, Ohio. Occupation, civil engineer. Res­ idence since 1912, Barberton, Ohio V-2. Eva Brown B-Dec. 20, 1892, Senecaville, Ohio V-3. F sther Bro,vn B-April 8, 1902, Senecaville, Ohio IV-6. Emma (Brown) Lowry B-July 17, 1863, Senecaville, Ohio D-Jany. 4, 1891, in Kansas City, Mo., of typhoid fever. Buried in Sene­ caville, Ohio M-Nov. 6, 1884, Senecaville, Ohio, by Rev. Newton Donaldson Howard Stephen Lowry, D. D. S., son of Richard and Louise

IIl-12. Hamilton ScoH B-Oct. 13, 1835, GuP.rnsey county, Ohio D-Aug. 10, 1865, hospital, , Ga., typhoid fever M-March 19, 1857 Sarah Ann •McDowell B-Sept. 23, 1836 D-July 18, 1891, Brooks, Iowa. Burial Walnut cemetery, Corning, Iowa IV-1. Loretta l\1itchell Scott IV-2. Clarence Leslie Scott IV-3. William l\'1cDo,vell Scott B-Dec. 25, 1862 D--- M--- Effie Neighbors B--­ D--- V-1. Infant Son IV-1. Loretta :Mitchell Scott B-March 13, 1858, Guernsey county, Ohio D---. M-Aug. 4, 1878, Eureka, Adams county, Iowa, Rev. A. Y. Cupp, Evangeli­ cal church, officiating George Ira Lincoln B-March 1, 1858, Henry county, Iowa D--- V -1. Mary· Lee Lincoln B-Jr..ny. 25, 1880 D--- M- Dec. 30, 1901, Corning, Iowa, Rev. Lewis Harris, Christian church, cousin to the bride, officiating Jacob Strait La,vrence B--- D--- VI-1. George Ho,vard Lawrenc~ B-Nov. 29, 1903, Brooks, Iowa D--- VI--2. Charles Warren Lawrence B-Oct. 5, 1907, Corning, Iowa D--- Vl-3. Thomas Lincoln Lawrence B-A ug. 13, 1909, Corning, Iowa V-2. Anna Leota Lincoln B-Feb. 12, 1881 D-Sept. 6, 1882 V-3. Sybil Amanda Liocoln B-Janv. 'i, 18E3 D--·- . M-July 20, 1910, Corning, Iowa, Rev. A. Y. Cupp offi~iating Dr. ,varren L. Gardner B--- D--- VI-1. Howard Lincoln Gardner B-April 22, 1912, Corning, Iowa D--- VI-2. Gertrude Hazel Gardner B-May 3, 1914, Corning, Iowa D--- FAMILY OF HAMILTON ScoTT I I I

V-4. Thomas Clarence Lincoln B-J uly 20, 1884, farm four miles west of Corning, Iowa D--- . M-Feb. 6, 19ro, home of bride, Mercer Center, Adams Co., by Rev. Moore, M. E. church Edith Haggarty, daughter of vVillian1 and Sarah· (Darrah) Haggarty B-Sept. 22, 1882, near Mercer Center D--- Vl-1. Thomas VVilliam Lincoln B-Oct. 29, 1909, home farm D--- Vl-2. Russell Lincoln B-July 27, 1914, near Brooks D--- V-5. Almira Anne Lincoln B-June 23, 1886 D--- . M-Dec. 27, 1905, Brooks, Iowa, Rev. Elliot Vorehees, M. E. church Jesse F. Ball B-March 26, 1884, near Nevenville, Adams Co., Iowa D--- VJ-1. Infant Son B-July 12, 1909 D-J uly 12, 1909 VI-2. Laura Loretta Ball B-Aug. 18, 1910 D--- Vl-3. Jessie 'i\"aneta Ball B-April 27, 1914 D--- V-6. Edna Fern Lincoln B-June 27, 1894 D--·- M-Jany. 27, 1915 Charles Chalmers B-March, 1892 D--- Vl-1. Mary Mildred Chalmers B-March 11, 1916 D--- Charles Chalmers was the son of --- and Mary Jane Skinner of Ottawa, Cailada, forn1erly of London, Engiand, and under process of law is ,vith his naturalization papers changing his name to Charles Chalmers He was raised by his uncle, Joseph Chalmers, of Brooks, Iowa Family of Leander Scott

III-13. Leander Scott B-April 21, 1837 · D-Nov. 5, 1862, Boliver, Tenn. M--- Mary J. Moore B---­ D--- Child: IV-1. James Ross Scott B-Nov. 6, 1859, Cambridge, Ohio D--- M-Sept." 8, 1887, Martins Ferry, Ohio Sarah E. Carmichael B-Feb. 5, 1861, Martins Ferry, Ohio D---- Child: V-1. Anna Q. Scott B-Dec. 1, 1896, Mingo Junction, Ohio D--- IV-2. Alvilda P. Scott B-Dec. 30, 1860 D-Dec. 29, 1890 M-March 28, 1883 Theodore F. Rabe Child: V-1. Clara P. Ra be B-Jany. 27, 1885 D--­ M-July 5, 1911 William H. Kelley Child: VI-1. \iVilliam Rabe Kelley B-June 7, 1913 D--- IV-3. William Leander Scott B-Sept. 8, 1862 D--- Family of Susan Elizabeth Scott (Shipley)

III -14. Susan Eliza beth Scott B-July 4. 1838 D-Aug. 19, 1914, Cvlumbus, Ohio M-Feb. 13, 1866 Archibald ·Alexander Shipley B-Aug. l,' 1841 D---, 1909, Columbus, Ohio IV-1. Ada l\1cCulloch Shipley B-Feb. 16, 1867 D-- M-Nov. 22, 1893 Leuray Sanford Steward B-Sept., 1870 D-- Residence, No. 60, S. 9th Ave., Columbus, Ohio V-1. Ethel Frances Steward B-Aug. 21, 1894 D--- V-2. Jene Scott Steward B-June 18, 1896 .. D--- V-3. Sanford Hixson Steward B-Aug. 3, 1899 D--- IV-2. v\~alter VVebster Shipley B-,Tune 18, 1871 D--.- M--- Residence, Columbus, Ohio IV-3. Charles Frederick Shipley B-July, 1874 · D-Sept., 1874 Mrs. Susan E. (Scott) Shipley was the youngest of four sisters, and fourteenth of fifteen children. She lived many years in Columbus, Ohio, \vhere her husband had been in the employ of the U. S. Express Co. Here her children gre\V up and married, and then she died, the last member of her father's family. She "vas a sweet spirited, lovable woman, and performed well her part in life.

INDEX

PAGE PAGE Ireland and Ulster ...... 7 Andrew Zane Scott .. _...... 22, 78-102 The Scotch-Irish ...... 8-17 Kendall Family ...... 78 The Scott Reunion ...... 18-19 Erastus P. Scott...... 78, 80, 81 Scott-McCulloch Family ...... 22 Samuel C. Scott...... 78, 82, 83 Robert Scott Family ...... 22, 24 Charles A. Scott IV. . . . . 78, 84, 85 Robert F. Scott Family...... 23 Thomas M. Scott ...... 78, 86-88 Alexander Scott Family ...... 24 Zebb Scott...... 78, 89, 90 Charles Scott I...... 22, 25, 26 Annis (Scott) Harkins .... 78, 91-93 Charles Scott II...... 22, 27, 28 Alice (Scott) Chapman . . 78, 94-96 Annis'1' P. (Scott) Patterson \\7'illiam Scott ...... 78, 97-98 Family...... 22, 29-31 Mary Susan (Scott) Sammons Robert Sha,v Family ...... 32-33 . 78, 99-100 David Scott...... 22, 32-45 U. Grant Scott...... 78, 101 Robert Shaw Scott...... 34-37 Margaret J. (Scott> Humphreys George vV. Scott ...... 37-38 . 78, 102 i\lary E. (Scott) Beck . . . . . 38-40 Wilson Scott ... ~ ...... 22, 103-106 Milton T. Scott ...... 41-42 Joseph T. Scott ...... 103, 104, 105 Sarah A. (Scott) Barnes . . . 42~43 Alma M. Scott ...... 103, 105 Charles W. A. Scott ...... 43 44 Katherine T. (Scott) vVelch 103, 105 Nancy E. (Scott> Patton. . . . 44-45 DeElla. A..(Sc.ott) Blanchard 103, 105 George M. Scott ...... 22, 46-70 Eugenia (Scott) Blanchard. 103, 105 Cotton Family...... 49-51 Leila (Scott) Beckett .103, 105, 106 Cleland Family ...... 49-51 Fannie~ M. (Scott) Belt.103, 106, 107 Orion C. Scott...... 46, 54-70 Belt Family...... 107 Flagler Family. . . . . 54, 59, 60, 66 Sarah J. (Scott) Brown .... 22, 108, 109 Chapman Family ...... 66 Charlie S. Brown ...... 108, 109 Harold 0. Scott .... 54, 55, 61, 65 :Mary (grown) Campbell.. 108, 1_09 Corwin Family ...... 65 1\-Iartha Brown ...... 108, 109 Mabel E. (Scott) Adams .. H am1·1 ton ·s. cott ...... · ...... ')') ... , 11 o 54, 55, 59, 64, 67 Wm. l\1cDowell Scott . . . . . 110 Adams Family. . . . . 67 I..,oretta 1\-1. (Scott) Lincoln 110, 111 Ralph C. Scott .. 54,55,59,63,64,68 Mary L. (Lincoln) Lawrence .. 110 Dupuy Family ...... : . . . 68 Sybil A. (Lincoln) Gardner .. 110 Bertha l\fary Scott. . 54, 55, 59, 64 Thomas C. I..,incoln ..... 110, 111 Cleland l'v1. Scott...... 46, 56, 70 Almira A.(Lincoln) Ball. 110, 111 Atherton Family...... 70 Edna F. (Lincoln) Chalmers Mary Blanche Scott ...... 46, 52 110, 111 Flora D. (Scott) Townsend. 46, 53 Leander Scott ...... 22, 112 John Alberr Scott...... 46, 53 James Ross Scott...... 112 Charles Scott 111 and Family 22, 71-74 Susan E. (Scott) Shipley ..... 22, 113 Ross Scott and Family ..... 22, 75-77

Losing and Keeping The children kept coming, one by one, Till the boy3 were five and the girls were three, And the big brown house was alh·e with fun From the basement floor to the old roof-tree. Like garden flowers the little ones grew, Nurtured and trained with the tenderest care; "\Varmed by love's sunshine, bathed in its de,v, They bloomed into beauty, like roses rare. One of the boys gre,v weary one day, • And leaning his head on his mother's breast, He said, ul'm tired and cannot play- Let me sit a ,vhile on your knee and rest." She cradled him close in her strong embrace, She ·hushed him to sleep with her s,veetest song; And rapturous love still lighted his face . \Vhen his spirit had joined the heavenly throng. Then the eldest girl, with her thoughtful eyes, Who stood ",vhere the brook and the river- meet", Stole softly away into Paradise E're "the river" had reached ber slender feet. vVhile the father's eyes on the graves are bent The mother looked upward beyond the skies; '~Our treasures", she ,vhispered, "are only lent, Our darlings ,v~re angels in earth's disguise". The years flew by, and the children began \Vith longing to think of the world outside; And as each in his turn became a man The boys proudly went from their father's side. The girls were women, so gentle and fair, 1 hat lovers were speedy to ,voo_ and win; And with orange blossoms in braided hair, The old home left-new homes to begin. So, one by one the children have gone- The boys ,vere five and the girls were three­ And the big- bro,vn house is gloomy and lone, With two old folks for its company. They talk to each other about Jhe past, As they sit together at e,·entide, And say "All the children we keep at last Are the boy and girl ,vho in childhood died". --Author Unknown.