ILLINOIS GENEALOGY EXPRESS

A part of U. S. Genealogy Express

 

PIATT COUNTY
ILLINOIS

Biographies

The following Biographies have been extracted from the following source:
PORTRAIT
BIOGRAPHICAL ALBUM
OF DeWITT and PIATT COUNTY, ILL.
Publ. Chicago: Chapman Bros.  - 1891

A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y- Z

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John S. Madden is one of the representative farmers of Piatt County and one who has gained a competence by his well-directed efforts in tilling the soil. He owns two hundred and fifty-four acres of good land in Sangamon Township whereon all needful improvements have been made. That the land is carefully and intelligently cultivated goes without saying, and that the stock kept is of good breeds and grades and modern machinery is used in carrying on the work of the estate is plain to be seen by the most careless observer.
     The parents of our subject were John and Elizabeth (West) Madden, well-known in this section of Illinois as among the earliest settlers in Sangamon Township and owners of a large tract of land here. Some notice of their lives may be found in the biographical sketch of Silas Madden, on another page in this ALBUM. Their son, of whom we write, was born in the parental home here, November 1, 1840, and being reared on a farm naturally adopted his father's calling as his own. He received his elementary education in the old-fashioned log schoolhouse in which the subscription school of the pioneer days was kept, but was able to attend but little after he became old enough to aid in farm work. He started out in life for himself when nineteen years old, and from that day to the present, with the exception of the months spent in the service of his country, has been closely identified with the agricultural work of the county.
     Mr. Madden was married in February,1866,taking to share in life's fortunes Miss Cynthia Burton, who was born and reared in Ohio. This congenial union has resulted in the birth of twelve children, viz: Dora, Irene, Minnie, Charles, Harris (deceased), John, William, Perry, Josephine, Ralph, Olive and Edith. The happy parents are anxious that their children should fill an honored place among their fellow-men, and are giving them every possible opportunity to acquire the knowledge that will fit them for usefulness.
     Mr. Madden rendered excellent service as a soldier in the late Civil War and suffered for two months as a prisoner of war in the hands of the enemy in Arkansas. He was reared as a Republican, but for a dozen years has supported the Democratic party. The worthy son of a father who was a prominent and influential citizen and a mother whose good qualities were appreciated by her neighbors, he has the confidence of his fellow-men who are assured of his reliability and good citizenship.
(Source: Portrait & Biographical Album of DeWitt & Piatt Counties, Illinois - Chicago: Chapman Bros., 1891)
George L. Marquiss is one of those who are cultivating a portion of the soil of Piatt County in an intelligent and painstaking manner and reaping a due reward for their labors. He is a native of Sangamon Township in which he continues to make his home and opened his eyes to the light of day, January 31, 1839. His father, John Marquiss, was born in Pickaway County, Ohio, in 1815, and came to this State with his parents in 1833, the family settling on the territory now comprising Piatt County.
     The grandfather of our subject, Abraham Marquiss, entered a large tract of land and his son, upon reaching manhood, purchased a part of this tract and also made an entry. He carried on his agricultural pursuits until May 5, 1856, when he was called from time to eternity. He was a prominent member of the Masonic order. He had married Harriet P. Mallory, who was born at Harper's Ferry, Va., in 1818, removed to Ohio and thence to Illinois. She lived to a goodly age, breathing her last in 1885. Of her eight children three are now living. Grandfather Marquiss was a soldier in the War of 1812. He was born in Virginia in the latter part of the eighteenth century and died in this State about 1858.
     The subject of this biographical notice received his education in his native county, mostly in the district schools. He was seventeen years old when his father died and being the eldest of five children he was called upon to assume the management of the farm and in other ways take a man's place as his mother's chief support and assistant. He continued to form a part of the parental household until 1870 when he established a home of his own. He has an estate consisting of one hundred and seventy acres of excellent land in the cultivation of which he finds sufficient occupation for his time, and use for his powers of observation and judgment. The estate is supplied with the usual improvements and the family enjoy many comforts.
     The lady who on October 26, 1870, became the wife of Mr. Marquiss was Miss Olivia Vincent, who was born near Winchester, Ill., in 1849. Her parents, Enoch and Catherine (Jones) Vincent, natives of Delaware, came to this State about 1847 and Mr. Vincent is still living engaged in the drug trade in Moultrie County. To Mr. and Mrs. Marquiss seven children have been born, named respectively, Elmer, Francis, Catherine, Mary O., Bessie G., Susan E. and Clara E.  The household band has been broken by death, the only children now living being Mary, Susan and Clara. In their great affliction the parents have been comforted by the hope of a happy meeting in a land which death will never enter.
Mr. Marquiss was engaged in valiant service in his country's cause from August 13, 1862, until discharged on account of physical disability.  He was a member of the One Hundred and Seventh Illinois Infantry and received his discharge at Louisville, Ky.  He, as a matter of course, belongs to the Grand Army of the Republic.  He has been a member of the Masonic order for more than a quarter of a century. In politics he is a stanch Republican, and he and his wife belong to the Methodist Episcopal Church, in which they have high standing as they have throughout the section" in which they live.
(Source: Portrait & Biographical Album of DeWitt & Piatt Counties, Illinois - Chicago: Chapman Bros., 1891)
NOTE:  See 1883, 1903 & 1917 Histories for more on this family.
JAMES E. MARQUISS.  The representative of a well-known pioneer family of Piatt County is a prominent young farmer and stockman, of Goose Creek Twp.  He was born here on the old homestead Aug. 25, 1860.  His grandfather, Abraham Marquiss was a Virginian by birth and was born Jan. 5, 1789.  He was a son of William Marquiss who was also a native of Virginia where his birth occurred Aug. 9, 1766.  He emigrated to Kentucky thence to Cincinnati and finally settled in Pickaway County, Ohio, as one of its early pioneers and there died. 
     Abraham Marquiss served as a soldier in the War of 1812.  He accompanied his father to Pickaway County and assisted him to build a log cabin for the shelter of his family in the dense forests that then covered the country which were inhabited only by Indians and wild animals, no white settlers having then ventured to locate so far in the wilderness.  This was shortly after the settlement of Cincinnati and was prior to 1800.  A farm was cleared up and improved and in time became a valuable possession in the family.
     Abraham Marquiss was married while living in Ohio to Elizabeth Barnes, in 1809.  In 1833 he removed to this State, journeying hither with his family in wagons with one team of horses and one of oxen.  He was thirty-one days on the way and after his arrival selected a suitable site for a home on the banks of Goose Creek in Piatt County.  Here he erected the third cabin that was built on this stream, as the settlers here then were few and far between, he being among the earliest pioneers of this county.  In that humble home the father of our subject, Henry Marquiss, was reared to the life of a farmer.  He experienced many of the hardships and inconveniences incidental to the first settlement of a country.  He had not long reached the meridian of life when he died in 1868, at the age of thirty-nine years.  His wife, who bore the maiden name of Mary J. Corn, was a native of Ohio and died here in January, 1890, at the age of fifty-eight years.  Seven children were born of their marriage, of whom five are living.
     He of whom we wright laid the foundation of his education in the public schools.  He attended one term at a school in Monticello and a part of the time in the St. Louis Business College.  He has always lived on the old Marquiss homestead in Goose Creek Township, with the exception of a few years which he spent with his parents in Monticello.  He owns one hundred and eighty-one acres of good land which formerly belonged to his father and is well fitted up with all modern improvements, including a large frame dwelling and other conveniences.  He devotes his time entirely to his farming and stock-raising interests and is a young man of exceptional energy and industry, so that though he is yet in the flush of early manhood he has won for himself an assured position among his fellow-farmers. 
     Mr. Marquiss was happily married in 1888 to Miss Louisa Moore, a native of Piatt County and a daughter of Caleb and Louisa Moore, of Monticello.  They have established here a home where comfort and hospitality reign and their household is completed by their little son Henry.  Mr. Marquiss' career has thus far been a credit to the citizenship of his native county and he is highly thought of by the people among whom he has always lived and who know him well as a bright, enterprising young man of excellent habits and good repute.  Socially he is a Knight of Pythias.  Politically, he is a Republican.
(Source: Portrait & Biographical Album of DeWitt & Piatt Counties, Illinois - Chicago: Chapman Bros., 1891)
NOTE:  See 1883, 1903 & 1917 Histories for more on this family.
William McCann. All lovers of their country, and especially those who recall the sad days of the Civil War, will agree in paying a tribute of respect to every man who has an honorable war record. The simple fact that a man was willing to give up the pleasures and comforts of his home life and embark upon the hazardous enterprise of a soldier, is sufficient to make us look with interest upon him, and when we learn that his valor was unmistakably shown and his patriotism displayed in many a hard-fought contest, our admiration and respect are deepened.
     William McCann
, of whose history we purpose to give a brief record, is well known in Piatt County as one of her enterprising and successful farmers, as a man of strict integrity, and as an old soldier whose conduct during three years of martial life was such as to win from his captain a "war diploma." His home is pleasantly located in Sangamon Township, the substantial dwelling being accompanied by adequate farm buildings of various kinds, and the estate comprising two hundred and fifty-five acres of choice land which owes its present condition to the man who now owns and occupies it.
     Plaza McCann, grandfather of our subject, was one of the first male children born in Kentucky and spent his entire life in that State, dying some time in the '30s.  Among the members of his family was a son, Neal, who was born in Fayette County in 1788, and removed to Shelby County, Ind., in 1822. The section to which he went was heavily timbered and very sparsely settled, wild game, such as wolves, panthers, deer, etc., being still seen in large numbers. He entered land upon which he built a log cabin, where a few years later the eyes of his son, our subject, opened to the light. Prior to his death, which occurred in 1834, Mr. McCann had cleared up forty acres and placed it under thorough cultivation. He was a consistent member of the Baptist Church.
     Neal McCann married Eliza Young, who was born in Clark County, Ky., in 1796, and died in California in 1885 at the venerable age of eighty-nine years. Her father, James Young, who was born in Virginia, went to Kentucky in an early day and soon after the removal all the other members of the family to which he belonged were killed by the Indians. Escaping the calamity that had befallen his relatives, he lived to the ripe old age of ninety-two years, dying in the '30s. He served in the Revolutionary War. Mrs. Eliza McCann became the mother of ten children, but two of whom are living at this writing.
     The subject of this biographical notice was born March 6, 1830, and received but a limited education, his attendance at school not exceeding three months. The home of his parents was far distant from the schoolhouse, and during his early boyhood it was impossible for him to make the long trip except when the weather was favorable, and even then it was attended with some danger on account of the density of the forests, wherein wild animals prowled. In 1846, at the age of sixteen years, the lad began working on the Shelbyville & Edenburg Railroad, and from that time on during three years, he was busy at railroad work of some kind. He then worked at odd jobs until he was of age and a few months after reaching his majority came to Piatt County.
     Selecting a tract of land in Sangamon Township Mr. McCann began the course of steady agricultural effort that has given him an honorable place among his fellow-craftsmen and secured to his family many privileges that were unknown to his own early life. He was accompanied hither by the bride of a few months, he having been married January 16, 1851, to Miss Elizabeth Schryock, who was born in Shelby County, Ind., October 20, 1834.  She has had many opportunities to display the worth of her character and the usefulness of her knowledge, both in the cares of her home and in her association with those about her, and she occupies as high a place in the regard of the community as does her companion.
     Mr. McCann enlisted in the Union Army July 13, 1862, and was mustered into the service at Camp Butler September 4. Among the battles in which he bore an active part were Huff's Ferry, Campbell Station, Dandridge, Resaca, various battles around Atlanta during the campaign, Columbus, Spring Hill and Franklin. At the siege of Knoxville he distinguished himself for valor and patriotism, and on account of his action there was presented with the testimonial in which he takes just pride. He was mustered out of the service June 22, 1865, at Camp Butler, and discharged July 2. Upon the organization of the company of which he was a member he was appointed Corporal, an office which he held from that time on. The only misfortune that befell him other than the usual privations, was a confinement in the hospital in Marietta for about two weeks.
     To our subject and his good wife nine children have been born, of whom those now living are Eliza, James, Ella, Frank, Charles, George and Joseph. They have been given excellent school privileges, some having been graduated from the Normal School and others having attended college. Several of the family are engaged in the profession of teaching, transmitting to others the valuable knowledge which they acquired.
     Mr. McCann was brought up under Democratic influences and voted that ticket until 1856, but since that date has been a Republican. He has served as a delegate to conventions and is ready to advance the interests of the party by his expression of opinion and by joining in the local work, but has not aspired to any office except the minor ones in his immediate vicinity. He belongs to the Grand Army of the Republic and has been a Mason since 1854. He has been a Steward and Trustee in the Methodist Episcopal Church and has also represented the congregation at various religious meetings. He has the sympathy of his wife in his religious faith and practice, she belonging to the same church.
(Source: Portrait & Biographical Album of DeWitt & Piatt Counties, Illinois - Chicago: Chapman Bros., 1891)
GEORGE E. McMILLEN is a member of the firm of Saint & McMillen, dealers in hardware, agricultural implements, carriages, etc. in the town of Monticello, Piatt Co.  Our subject is a native of Cass Co., Ind., where he was born Nov. 18, 1849.  His father, Thomas McMillen, was a native of Greenfield, Ross Co., Ohio, and was there reared and married.  After marriage he moved to Indiana and was a pioneer of Logansport.  He bought a tract of timber land, on which he built a log cabin which was occupied by his family for a time.  He then erected a more commodious frame house, cleared quite a tract of his land and resided there until 1856.  In that year with his wife and nine children he came with a team to Illinois, and took up his residence in Piatt County.  Three years later he removed to Hensley Township, Champaign County, where he bought a tract of improved land three miles northwest of Champaign.  He made his home there until his eyes were closed in death in 1865.
     The maiden name of the mother of our subject was Mary Hathaway, and she was born at Ft. Harrison, Ind.  Her father was one of the earliest settlers of Terre Haute, and was killed at the battle of Tippecanoe.  Mrs. McMillen now makes her home in Monticello.
     George E. McMillen of whom we wright, was seven years old when he came to Illinois with his parents, and he was reared on a farm in Champaign Co.  He commenced to assist his father at an early age, and after he attained his majority continued farming on his own account in Champaign County for several years, making his home with his mother until his marriage.  After that he removed to Piatt Co. and bought a farm in Goose Creek Township, and for three yeas actively engaged in its management.  At the expiration of that time he came to Monticello and carried on manufacture of tile and brick until 1888 when he formed a partnership with Henry H. Saint, and engaged in his present business.  He and his partner carry a good line of hardware, stoves, agricultural implements, etc., deal extensively in carriages, wagons and farm machinery, and are conducting a flourishing business.
     Mr. McMilllen was married in 1876 to Miss Christina Leatherman, a native of Salem, Ind.  They have a cozy home and three children have been born to them - Willert, Gertrude and Rolla.  Mr. McMillen is a sterling, wide-awake man, who possesses excellent business qualifications and stands well among the business men of this county.  He is one of the leading members of the Fraternal Lodge, No. 58, A. F. & A. M.  In politics he is a stanch Republican.
(Source: Portrait & Biographical Album of DeWitt & Piatt Counties, Illinois - Chicago: Chapman Bros., 1891 - Page 436)
George F. Miller, a well-known resident of Monticello and formerly Sheriff of Piatt County, was born on a farm in Carroll County, Ind., October 18, 1831.  His grandfather was a pioneer of Montgomery County, Ohio, and on a farm on the Little Miami River, Stephen A. Miller, the father of our subject, was born and reared.  The latter removed to Indiana and took up pioneer work in Carroll County.  He bought land now included in the village of Delphi, lived upon it a short time, then bought wild land three miles from town and put up a log house in which our subject was born.  After some years' residence there the father sold out and after a short sojourn in Dayton went to White County, which was his home until after the death of his wife.  He then came to Monticello and spent the remnant of his days with his son George.  The mother of our subject, formerly Julia A Fortune, was a daughter of George and Margaret Fortune and a native of Pennsylvania.
     The early life of George F. Miller was spent on a farm in the ordinary alternation of study, play and work.  When twenty-two years old he began to learn the trade of a carpenter, which he followed in his native State until 1858.  He then came to Monticello, Ill., and continued his handicraft here until 1861, when he entered the army.  He was enrolled July 10, in Company F, Second Illinois Cavalry, and in January, 1864, veteranized, continuing to lead a soldier's life until January 1866, when he was honorably discharged.  Among the most important battles in which he participated were Bolivar, Holly Springs, Port Gibson, Raymond, Champion Hills and the siege and capture of Vicksburg.  After his brave career as a defender of the Union Mr. Miller returned to Monticello and followed his trade three years, at the expiration of which time he engaged in business as a merchant.  He continued this career until 1884 since which time he has mostly been in public service.
     The marriage of Mr. Miller and Miss Nellie J. Russel, a native of Anderson, Ind., was solemnized at the bride's home in 1858, and has been blessed by the birth of two children - Ida N. and Anna B.  Mr. Miller is a sturdy Republican and was nominated on the ticket of his party for Sheriff and elected to that office in 1886 for a term of four years.  He is identified with the Franklin Post No. 256, G. A. R., Fraternal Lodge No. 58, F. & A. M., and Markwell Chapter, No. 48, R. A. M.  He has been an efficient officer, an honorable business man and a reliable citizen, and as such is duly respected.
(Source: Portrait & Biographical Album of DeWitt & Piatt Counties, Illinois - Chicago: Chapman Bros., 1891)

George MillerIn the death of Mr. Miller, Piatt County lost a good citizen, who, though he had not long been a resident of this part of the State, had already gained an assured place among its substantial farmers and stock-raisers.  He was the proprietor of a fine farm in Blue Ridge Township, which was under admirable tillage and was well improved.  Mr. Miller was a native of Somerset County, N. J., where his birth occurred May 30, 1831.  His parents were George and Sarah (Duham) Miller.  His father was born in England in 1798 and emigrated to America at the age of twenty-one years.  He settled in New Jersey and passed the remainder of his life in this country, dying in his eightieth year in 1878.  His wife departed this life in 1864.  They were people who were well thought of in their neighborhood, and were active in religious Episcopal Church, and she being a stanch Presbyterian.  In 1845 the Millers became pioneers of Fulton County, Ill.  Our subject was then a boy of fourteen years.  He was reared on a farm and was educated in the common schools, which in his day did not afford very good advantages for an education.
     When our subject was twenty-one years old he began his career as a farmer on his own account, and in due time by diligent and unwearying labor he secured a competency.  He removed to Piatt County in 1876 and settled on land which he had purchased two years before in Blue Ridge Township.  His homestead was a tract of wild prairie when he located upon it, and in the years that were spared to him he made many fine improvements and greatly increased the value of his farm.  In the midst of his usefulness death stayed his hand and when scarcely past the prime of life he was called upon to give it up May 13, 1879, on the very day that he was forty-eight years old.  His death was a sad blow to his family and the removal of so good a citizen was felt to be a great loss to his community and to the interests of his township.  He was strictly moral an upright in his habits and was a valued member of the Baptist Church in which he had been associated since he was twenty-six years old.  In him the Democratic party found one of its most honest and earnest supporters.  Mr. Miller merited and received the esteem of all with whom he came in contact either in a social or business way.  He began life with limited means, but his industry and close attention to his duties brought their due reward.
     Our subject was very fortunate in the married life upon which he entered Oct. 11, 1859, with Miss Christiana KlineMrs. Miller is a native of Franklin Co., Pa., and was born March 16, 1838.  She is the daughter of John M. and Elizabeth (Hawker) Kline, natives respectively of Maryland and Pennsylvania.  They were among the pioneers of Fulton County, to which they came in 1854.  They located upon a farm and there the father was actively engaged in his occupation until his death in 1864, at the age of seventy-one years.  The mother died in 1885, at the venerable age of eighty-seven years.  They were fine Christian people and members of the German Baptist Church.  Of their ten children six are now living.  To our subject and his wife were born the following five children:  Susan E., wife of Flem. T. Osborn, a farmer living near Osborn; Lizzie B., wife of George D. Brown, a farmer in Blue Ridge Township; Frank L., Clara A. and George S., the three latter of whom are at home with their mother.
     Mrs. Miller is an active, capable woman an excellent housewife and a good manager.  After her husband's death she assumed the management of the farm and under her skillful supervision it is one of the most productive and desirable estates in this vicinity.  It comprises two hundred and thirteen acres of good land and is amply provided with neat buildings and all the necessary machinery to operate is successfully.  Mrs. Miller is a woman of a kind disposition and possesses of her attributes of character that make her respected by all who know her, and is a member of the German Baptist Church.
(Source: Portrait & Biographical Album of DeWitt & Piatt Counties, Illinois - Chicago: Chapman Bros., 1891)

Jacob R. Mitchell, a well-known resident of Hammond, is connected with the agricultural interests of Piatt County, as the owner of a large farm in Unity Township, from the rental of which he derives a good income.  Mr. Mitchell was born in Pickaway County, Ohio, January 1, 1859.  When he was quite young his parents Jacob and Mary Mitchell, who were of German descent, came to Piatt County, and died not long after settling here.  They had five children named as follows:  William, John, Joseph, George and our subject.  Thus sadly bereaved of a father's and mother's care, he of  whom we write was reared to manhood by James R. Brown, of whom see sketch on another page of this volume.
     Mr. Mitchell grew to manhood upon a farm and has made agriculture his chief business, having acquired a thorough practical knowledge of the calling in his youth. The most of his life has been passed in Piatt County, and sine 1887, he has lived at Hammond.  He is a large land owner, his possessions including three hundred and twenty acres of land in Unity Township, the most of which he rents, and besides his farms he owns two houses and eight lots in the thriving village of Hammond.  Thus it will be seen that he has been prospered in his life work, for although still a young man, he has acquired a fine property.  In politics he believes in the principles of the Democratic party, and supports the candidates who are pledged to uphold those principles.  His reputation is excellent, both in social and financial circles.
     A very important event in the life of Mr. Mitchell, was his marriage, solemnized at Hammond, May 21, 1882, when Miss Delitha B. Ponder became his wife.  To them have been born three children, namely: Bertha E., born Feb. 13, 1885; James H., March 11, 1887; and Jacob Marcus, Mar. 6, 1889.
     Mrs. Mitchell was born in Tennessee, Nov. 13, 1859, and is a daughter of Joseph P. Ponder, a prominent citizen of this county, who is now living in retirement in Unity Township.  He was born in North Carolina, May 22, 1816, and there he grew to manhood and was married Dec. 14, 1837, to Miss Matilda Radford, who was also a native of North Carolina, born Mar. 8, 1820.  They passed the early years of their wedded life in their native State, whence they subsequently removed to Tennessee, and there they lived about ten years.  From there they went to Kentucky, and spent six years in Clay County, that State.  In 1864 they came to Piatt County, Ill., and located in Unity Township, where they have since made their home.  Mr. Ponder followed agricultural pursuits during his active live, but has not retired from former enterprises, and he and his wife are passing their declining years in their home at Hammond, in the enjoyment of the fruits of their early labors.
     Mr. and Mrs. Ponder have been greatly blest in their wedded life by the birth of eight children, as follows:  Sophronia J., Naomi, Verlancia C., James, John, Delitha, Marcena L., and one that died in infancy.  The parents are people of true Christian worth, and are members in high standing of the Missionary Baptist Church, to which their children also belong.
     We invite the attention of our readers to the lithographic portraits of Mr. Mitchell and his wife, presented in this connection.  This young couple enjoy the friendship of a large circle, and are remembered among the most refined and cultured people in the county.
(Source: Portrait & Biographical Album of DeWitt & Piatt Counties, Illinois - Chicago: Chapman Bros., 1891)
Lyle A. Moore came to Piatt County in the opening years of a stalwart manhood and since then has been identified with its agricultural interest as a skillful practical farmer in Bement Township.  He is a native of Guernsey County, Ohio, where his birth occurred September 8, 1847.  His parents were Thomas and Mary (Redd) Moore, natives respectively of Pennsylvania and Ohio.  The father was a farmer by occupation and was a pioneer of Ohio, where he passed his remaining years dying at a ripe age in 1883.  After the death of the father, the mother came to Bement Township on a visit to our subject, was taken sick and in about two weeks her death occurred in July, 1886.  She was the mother of twelve children, seven sons and five daughters, and our subject was the fourth child of this large family.
     Mr. Moore's early life was passed in his native place till he attained the age of twenty-three years.  Then wisely thinking that he could better his fortunes by carrying on the calling to which he had been bred - that of a farmer, in teh Prairie State - he came here and located on a quarter of section 16, Bement Township, which he purchased at that time.  He has been a resident here ever since, with the exception of a few months spent in Iowa and Ohio.  He has succeeded well in agricultural pursuits, and has a farm that compares favorably with the best in its vicinity.  It is supplied with a good set of neat and conveniently arranged buildings and its land is under admirable tillage.  Our subject took part in the late war as a member of Company C, One Hundred and Seventy-seventh Ohio Regiment, enlisted in April, 1864, and was stationed at Gallipolis, Ohio, a period of four months.
     The marriage of our subject to Miss Etta Shoemaker, a native of Ohio, was celebrated in Bement Township, September 28, 1876.  Their wedded life has been one of mutual benefit and happiness and has brought to them two sons whom they have named Charles T. and Wilber I.  Mr. and Mrs Moore have a cozy home that is rendered attractive to their many friends by their cordial hospitality.  Mr. Moore is a man who is alive to the interests of his township and seeks in every way to promote them.  He is especially concerned in educational matters and has held the office of School Director and of School Trustee.  He has sound views upon political matters and gives the Republican party his support.
     Mrs. Moore's father is a farmer by occupation, and was one of the pioneers of Ohio.  Her parents now reside in Monticello Township; they have five children living and one deceased.
(Source: Portrait & Biographical Album of DeWitt & Piatt Counties, Illinois - Chicago: Chapman Bros., 1891)
Robert Murphy. An assured position among the farmers of Piatt County is that held by Robert Murphy, who is successfully prosecuting his calling on section 32, Unity Township. His estate is sufficiently large to afford him abundant occupation for mind and body, and to furnish the means with which to secure all the comforts of life and make some provision for his declining years. It consists of one hundred and twenty acres which the owner has supplied with good improvements, including all necessary outbuildings, a comfortable dwelling, and the minor conveniences and attractions of a farm home. On every part of the estate the evidences of intelligent management may be seen, and the surroundings of the residence indicate the presence of refined womanhood and her controlling hand in the household economy.
The birth of Mr. Murphy took place in Macoupin County, this State, February 15, 1844, his parents being Robert P. and Mary Ann (Clark) Murphy. The father was born in Kentucky and died at his home in this State, February 22,1847. The mother, who was born in Tennessee, survives, her present home being in Texas. The parental family consists of five children, our subject being the third in order of birth. Deprived of his father's care in early childhood, Robert Murphy owes to his mother's counsel and influence all that is best in his character and habits. His early life to the age of about thirteen years was spent on a farm in his native county and be then came to Piatt County, living in Cerro Gordo Township until December, 1874. At that date he located where he has continued to live, in Unity Township.
     The graces of mind and heart and the pleasing manners of Miss Mary A. Barber won the deep regard of Mr. Murphy and his wooing proving successful, she became his wife April 7, 1870. She was born in Madison County, this State, October 31, 1854, and is the fourth in a family of nine children. Her parents, Lyman and Elizabeth Ann (Judy) Barber, are now living at Pierson Station. They are natives respectively of Rhode Island and Madison County, Ill. Mr. and Mrs. Murphy have had six children, who are named respectively, James A., George L., Charles R., Etta F., Walter L. and Jesse E., Etta F. was cut down by the reaper, death, when ten months old.
     Mr. Murphy is a reliable and public-spirited citizen, interested in whatever will promote the welfare of his fellow-men and ready at all times to lend his aid to worthy enterprises, though never desirous of making himself conspicuous. In politics he is a Republican. He and his wife belong to the Baptist Church, have high standing in that religious body, and are regarded with great respect by all to whom their characters and lives are known.
(Source: Portrait & Biographical Album of DeWitt & Piatt Counties, Illinois - Chicago: Chapman Bros., 1891)
William Muthersbaugh is one of Bement's active business men, dealing in live stock and fresh and salt meats.  He was formerly associated with his father upon whose death he succeeded to the entire business, in the control of which he is manifesting an energetic spirit and a judicious understanding of business methods and the avenues of trade in which success may be won.  He is the third in a family of five children, his brothers and sisters being Adeline (now the wife of William Hale), James Harvey and Mary, wife of William Devore.
     The late Jacob Muthersbaugh, father of our subject, was a native of Mifflin County, Pa., whence he came to Bement in 1862.  For a time he was engaged in various occupations but for some years prior to his demise had operated a meat market.  He laid aside the cares of earth and entered into rest February 19, 1890.  He had been bereft of his faithful companion in September, 1876.  She was a native of the same county as himself and bore the maiden name of Mary Jane Bell.
     The birthplace of our subject was Lewistown, Pa., and his natal day April 4, 1859.  He was therefore but a child when he took up his abode in Bement, of which he has been a resident since, with the exception of about two years when he was located in Nebraska.  During his boyhood and youth he enjoyed the usual school privileges and laid the foundation for a useful career.  About 1880 he engaged in business with his father, the firm being known as Jacob Muthersbaugh & Son.  As before stated he succeeded to the business and now in addition to carrying on a meat market buys and ships live stock quite extensively.  His market is well located and is kept up in first-class shape.  Mr. Muthersbaugh is doing a good business and enjoys the confidence and esteem of his fellow townsmen and all with whom he has dealings.  He is financially solid, owning considerable valuable property.
(Source: Portrait & Biographical Album of DeWitt & Piatt Counties, Illinois - Chicago: Chapman Bros., 1891)

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