h[$torioatog - The Henry County Historical Society and Museum
Transcrição
h[$torioatog - The Henry County Historical Society and Museum
Vol. 14 Number Spring, -1986 THO HONRY OOUNTY t Ftr , ll] .D H[$TORIOATOG F(]UNOED I8E7 , '';:' '''i'i/:'?: t t L,^ ì 4: JACK PBEIPS HÊNRY COUNTY III5TORICAL SOCIETY MUSEUM COMPLEX "Bringing history to life .. .and life to history." Tnn BUNIIuÀL Punureatron 0n Tnn Hnlvnv CIounnv HrsronuoÀL $00rüTy, [Nc. I THE HENRY COUNTY HISTORICALOG is the biannual publication of the HENRY COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY, INC. 606 So. 14th St. New Castle, Indiana 47362 Founded April, 1887 Telephone: 31.71529-4028 - Officers - President Mrs. Wilma L. Wampler Kern, (Mt. Summit) Mrs. Dorotha Hoover White, Vice-Pres. Trustees Richard Pickering Ratcliff,- Chai¡man "v (Spiceland) Don Copeland (Ashland) (New Castle) Mrs. Eleanor Jessup Painter, Secretary Richard Scott Bouslog (New Castle) (New Castle) Richard McKnight (New Castle) Mrs. Mary Phyllis Scott Hayes Membership Secretary (New Castle) Douglas W. Wilson, Tleasure¡ Mrs. Mary Clift Morris (New Castle) (Knightstown) Curators - Mrs. Evelyn S. Clift, Head Curator Mrs. Mildred Davis, Assistanb Curaüor Mrs. Mary E. Caldwell, Curator Emeritus "Unless you cherish the memory of your ancestors, you deserve to be forgotten by your Posterity." EdmundBwke "I know of no way of judging futwe but by the past." the -PatrickHenry - ciluE f,ilD tn¡ümtts SuLrutt 0t 99Tf, ilnfttü. UEEî¡ilo The 99th annual meeting of the Henry County Historical Society will convene at 6:00 p.m., Thursday, April 24, 1986, in the Victorian living room of the General William Grose home with Wilma L. Kern, Society president, presiding. Reports of the officers, trustees, society treasurer, and museum curator will be followed by an election of officers for 1986-87. At 6:30 we'll adjourn for a country supper, prepared by Donna Matthews of Pleasant Hill Parüy House in Harrison Township. The program will be presented at 7:30 in the Grose home by Wiley 'W. "Bill" Spurgeon of Muncie. Mr. Spurgeon, Executive Editor of the "Muncie Sta¡" and "Muncie Evening Press," has chosen "Easte¡¡ Indiana Crimes and Criminals" as the subject of his address. A fifth generation Delaware counbian he is the conductor of the "Our Neighborhood" column in the "Muncie Star" and the author of A PictoriaJ History of Muncie and Delaware County, published in f984. Currently he is writing a history of Ball Memorial Hospital, Muncie, and Syracuse and Wawasee, Indiana. \{iley Spurgeon is a gtaduate of Benjamin Burris High School, Muncie, and attended Washington and Lee, Sta¡rford and Indiana universities, majoring in history. Wilma Kern is one of his former Burris teachers. Active in various civic organi- kd;-b::åii'å'ifil:"*T:'iå'iï'if """$::*"countvHis' \ Wiley W. "Bill" Spurgeon Shown in 1984 with a copy of his book A Pictorial Hístory of Muncie and, Delaware County PmflilG IIESSICE rnou TilE PnES¡DINT esi ic wth ave so that time I have served as secretary, trustee, and president; that long tenure of association with and responsibility to the Henry Cãunty Historical Society have constituted a rewarding and meaningful chapter of mY life. Within a fet" *eek. of my coming to the executive board of HCHS, the mystique of the Grose Home took hold of me. I have hea¡d others makã the sarne comment. I began to feel that I And so I say: Thank you, thank you, each and every - HEm WE GnoW organization bY oneself. concern of manY Persons tENE[t0Glt[¡.tï sPElß!ilú Warning! Genealogy Pox! Very Contagious to Adults! No Known Cure! Symptoms: Continual complaint as to need for names, dates and places. Patient has blank expression, sometimes deaf to spouse and children. Has no taste for work of any kind, except feverishly looking through records at libraries and courthouses. Has compulsion to write letters. Swears at mailman when he doesn't leave mail. Frequents strange places such as cemeteries, ruins, and remote, desolate country areas. Makes secret night calls. Hides phone bills from spouse' Mumbles to self. Has strange, faraway look in eyes. Treatment: Medication is useless. Disease is not fatal, but gets progressively worse. Patient should attend genealogy workshops, subscribe to genealogical magazines and be given a quiet corner in the house where he can be alone. Remarks: The unusual nature of this dis' ease the sicker the patient gets, the more he enjoys it . . ' - All Those Kisses - Remember when you used to get letters (or still do) that closed with a lot of "X's"? You knew what was meant, but do you know why an "X" rather than any other letters? During the Middle Ages, when few persons were able to write, many documents were signed with an "X." Signers kissed the letter to affi¡m their sinceriby in the sarne way they kiss' ed the Bible when taking an oath. The letter "X" was not se- lected at random. It was the sign of Saint Andrew and implied a sacred promise to fulfill one's obligation in the saint's name [GNll! New Members: August 1, 1985 Mr. Paul B. Whelchel, Anderson Liz York, New Castle Mr. William L. Walker, New Castle one! WilmaL. Kern - Feb.20, 1986 Adrian Wheeler, Shirley Mrs. Raymond Albrecht, New Castle Mr. Randy A. Clark, New Castle Mrs. Stanley Knisely, Huntertown Mrs. W. R. Larson, Columbus, Ohio Peggy E. McKinney, Indianapolis Mrs. Georgia L. Gillespie, St. Joseph, Missouri Mr. Thomas L. Bowen, Nashville Mrs. Betty Joyce Foster, Charlottesville Mr. Jerry \{. Miller, Knightstown Mr. Ted L. Moyer, New Castle Freda Rawlins, Knightstown June Dege, New Castle Mrs. D. W. Grossman, Knightstown Mr. Clyde Kirkpatrick, New Castle Mr. O. J. Stocker, Indianapolis Mr. Lowell W. Lacy, Losantville Mrs. Donetta Ratliff, Middletown Debby K. Hisey, Creswell, Oregon Frances J. Jones, Tacoma, Washington Thelma O'Reilly, New Castle Mr. Chris G. Sweigart, Rosemead, California Mr. & Mrs. Harry Burkhart, New Castle Odessa Rising, New Castle Mrs. Margaret E. Day, New Castle Mrs. Mary Catherine Sample, Zionsville Mrs. Robert N. Jennings, New Castle Mr. Andy Majewski, Shelbyville Mrs. Beth Gallien, Knightstown "I am seeking the parents of Eliza Jane lüood, born in Virginia 1846, in Henry County and died in 1861 in Henry County. Believe she could be a daughber of Jacob, Edwa¡d, Joseph or Patrick \{ood. Does anyone have information on these men? Who were the parents of Ephraim Anderson, born in 1793 in Wayne County, North Carolina, and died in Henry County in 18õ7? His will mentions his wife Elizabeth and children Messhich, John, Lucretia, Frankey, Elza, Hugh, Pamela and Didismy. Believe Jesse Anderson who was listed in the 1840 Llenry County census with Ephraim is also related. Also seek parents of Mary Nestor Flanagan Dol- in 1830. She ma¡ried John Anderson Dec. 10, an whose obituary appeared in the New Castle "Courier" December 14, 1905. She lived at l?th and Shopp Avenue, New Castle, and owned a fa¡m in Franklin Township. She was buried in St. Anne's Catholic Cemetery, New Castle. Anyone know of her Irish origins?" - William H. Griffy, 550 Casta¡o Avenue, Pasadena, California 91107 . . . nt !,tEu0nnu The following members of the Henry County Historical Society have passed away in recent months: Mrs' Joseph (Mary Helen) Mcshurley, Columbus, Ohio; Mrs. Orville (Flossie A.) Clevenger, 84, Middletown; Mrs. Paul B. (Mary H.) Welchel, Anderson; Mrs. E. G. (Dorothy Hall) Scotten, Richmond, formerly of New Castle; Mrs. Fred C. (Mary S. Pfeiffer) Wayman, 90, New Castle, former trea- surer of the Society; and Mrs. Paul (Ramona Poer) Haynes, 54, and William L. Gephart, 65, both of Spice- land. I SIMPHNG F[nT ¡n SoUTH !,l0Uiltl tEl,lETEnT ¡NSCRPTI0NS [N¡t EPITIPHS: 10. Frank J. DeHart, born May 7, 1900, died May 19, 1943. (Editor's note: In the Fall, 1981 issue of the "Historicalog" I "We will always remember." Mound from South and epitaphs listed several inscriptions Park11. Willie A. Owens, wife of Obie, 1898-f 972. "Ea¡th has no Cem 1995, sorrow that Heaven cannot heal." view right, anot 12. Betty Blevins Lee, born July 25, 1897, died July 3, 1976. Scott Lundy, Kenney Montgomery, Andy Majewski, Darra Lu"Quicken thou me according to thy word." ellen and Christina Rutherford - returned to the cemetery in 13. Wendell W. Morgan, born September 18, 1918, died June search of other inscriptions and epitaphs of interest. Here is a "Those who knew him could not help loving 29, 1974. partial list of their findings.) him." 1. Florine L. Rogers, born September 14, 1925, died March 16, 14. Joseph Pickard, 1904-1941, and Georgia 1898-1985, his 19?8. "Truly a lovely lady." wife. "The light of life glows beyond its span." 2. Albert D. Ogborn. "Is this a better town because I live in ft." 3. Arvid P. Zetterberg, born April 9, 1923, died February 7, 1945. "Gave his life for his country. Counterattack, Battle of the Bulge, Simmerath, Germany." 4. Lillie May Caldwell, wife of Elmer D', 1907-1979' "To live in the hea¡ts we leave behind is not to die"' 5. Willie Allen Brown, 1920-197l. "Death will not pa-rt us." 6. Rebecca J. Whittle, born November 8, 1967, died May 15' 1968. "A darling on earth, an angel in Heaven." 7. Walter G. Lee, 1914-1979. "The western gates close only to have the eastern gates open." 8. Everett Brummett, husband of Gracie, 1916-1976' "God is love. Love endures forever." 9. Claude Cowan, Jr., born January 26, 1925, died October 1982. "A day of duty done/ A night of rest begun." 26, 1õ. Clyde John Salyers, born February 11, 1914, died Novem' ber 14, 19?0. "He built a monument of love in the hearts of all he knew." 16. Mary E. Smith, wife of Henry, 1902'1929. "4 place is vacant in our home that can never be filled." Brenda S. Hasty, born January 1õ, 1956, died November 6, 17. 1984. "This is my life. It belongs to you. For you are my life. This monument placed in loving memory by husand and son." 18. Dr. George W. Sweigart, 1874-1958. "Founded the Mt' Lawn Park and Speedway, 1930." 19. Wally H. "Wally" Wiatt, 1933-1979. "I did it my way." 20. Harlan Roy Prater, Jr., born June 25, 1938, died November ?, 1970. "I called but nobody answered." 21. Juanita Smith, wife of Cassel, 1931-f 980. "She is a flower blooming in my life forever." EilTilES tßou lHE DmHES 0t (Editor's note: Recently the diaries of Aldona <olü Tf,Uff Yauky (187?-1956), a lifelong resident of Liberty Township and President of the Henry County Historical Society from 1945 to 1947 a¡d 1948 to 1949, were given to me to peruse. Mr' Yauky kept combining wheat, butchering, planting garden, "going to town," etc. Deaths of his neighbors and friends were method- I have also mentioned some events far beyond the confines of his fa¡m home. Information recorded in parenthesis has been added by this editor with the help of Mrs. Robert K. (Dorotha Hoover) White, Society trustee and former neighbor of Mr' Yauky's, for the sake of claritY. 1934 May 28 John Dillinger escapes Crown Point jail. Big freight wreck at Millville. Corn 32Q a bushel. Jan. 6 Lutheran church dismantled west of Hagers- Mar. 29 town. Th¡ee houses burn in Liberty Township in one Aug. day. Will Rogers killed in plane crash. Ma¡ch May 3 1 1935 15 r$6 Jan. 23 Coldest day since January 12, 1918. Milked with gloves on. AldonaYauky Ma¡ch 13, 187?-November 30, 1956 Ja¡rt.2O-27 July Burned one ton of coal. Ten days averaged over 100o. Shaved twice in one day. r937 April Woman killed her man wibh an ax north of May Interurban service discontinued. First telephone message sent halfway a¡ound Mooreland. Dec. 15 world. May 27 June 10 Aug. 19 Aug. 24 Aug. 28 Sept. 5 Sept. 7 1939 Apr. 1 Sept. Greensboro.) Airplane wedding at Terre Haute. Sun hid for a week. 1940 July 17 "Willkie Day" at Elwood. Temperature 101o 5 Corn 850; Eggs 250. Roosevelt elected third time. Sept. Nov. Sept.11 Went to State Fair. Attended Blountsville homecoming. Sept. 13 Sept. 24 Dr. (R. E.) Kepner vaccinated pigs. Nov. Nov. Mrs. (Evelyn) Taylor at the (Millville) switch- 18 21 60o above. Wheat $1.20. Sugar rationing. Auto at Mooreland. Battery real dead. Feb. 9 Finished shucking corn. Hogs the lowest since 1949 Dec. Gas rationing. Dec. Eight men killed in a plane at Lewisville. Virgil Hoover killed in Australia. Apr. 194t Sears store burned in New Castle. Nov. 1 Nov. 18 Nov. 28 Dec.2 1947. Butchered beef and hauled wood to town. Man shot in Shirley. To church and attended two funerals. Cut potato vines. Finished shucking. To ditch meeting in evening. Vice-President Barkley first to marry in office. Frank Goff shot a¡d hung himself. A seagull was spotted in Mooreland. E. (Elmer) Dec. 13 Dec. 14 Dec. 15 To town with meat. Sold hogs at Cambridge City. Butchered seventh hog. Jan. 13 Worst grave (digging) experience. Grave caved Jan. 15 in. Wet and rainy. Lines and poles down due to ice. No phone ser- Ma¡. 7 12 Apr. Aug. 28 in four May Attended four funerals Aug.8 J. A. T\tlly's barn burned. Batson Cemetery torn up by vandals. Dec. 5 days. Millville church dismantled. 1944 in January. On January 26 tlrre Jan. June weather Ma¡ temperature was 62o. 3ê postage required on letters. Al Smith died. 3 Oct. 4 Oct. 8 Sept. 14 Ball upset tractor. 1950 Wendell Willkrìe died. 1945 Apr. 12 Roosevelt died. May 2 Hitler is dead. June 3 Princess Elizabeth had a baby boy. boa¡d had a baby. Dec. L2 20 Hauled manure. Dec. 9 lg42 Jan. 20 May 4 Graded (Batson) Cemetery lane. Big freight, train wreck at Dunreith. Babe Ruth buried. Horace Yergin (New Castle attorney) died. (Charles) Evans Hughes died. Attended Milton and Minnie Stafford's 50th anniversary. (They were prominent residents of vice. Jan. 23 Men wearing overcoats. John R. Millikan died. to sell (Millville) phone company. (The Millville exchange was sold to the New Lis- Decided July July Four accidents of four men in four days in four different ways in Liberty Township. Will Wiseha¡t sold (the Millville) elevator. Elmer Hoover's barn burned. Office of Price Administration discontinued. Rev. L. C. Howe buried. Aug. 15 Nov.9 Ed Wiseha¡t died. Amos Paul died. bon Telephone Company.) Hauled wood. Attended Farm Bureau meeting in evening. Bob Gordon died. Put in tombstone base. To town (New Castle). Dug grave in the p.m. Done making hay. Began combining wheat. (Lawrence) Wissler began painting barn. Painted lane fence at (Batson) cemetery. At cemetery pulling hedge. To Millville and Hag- Aug. 19 Nov. 30 Dec.2 Joe Leakey buried. New Lisbon elevator burned. erstown in the evening. Attended Mooreland Fair tractor pulling Nov, 15 1946 Apr June 6 4 6 July 16 Aug. 15 1947 Jan.20 Mar.2 Mar. 3 May I Aug.9 Oct.23 Nov. 4 Golden Payne died. Ten-inch snow. Claud Forrest killed at Millville. Neighbors came in and plowed for Clyde Hatfield who was in the hospital. Earthquake here at night. Historical Society meeting. Extra nice. On election boa¡d. (Ralph) Harvey elected to Congress. (Harold L.) Meadows elected Mayor (of New Castle). 1948 Ja¡. 28 June June 14 15 10 11 July July July 24 Aug. ? Sept. 6 Sept. 7 Went to State Fai¡ with Orlo Pierce. Oct. To Rushville corn contest. To town in the evening. Had to be pulled home. Auto bad. Auto at Vestals. (Tom Vestal's garage was located in the old Odd Fellows building at 1 Oct. t2 Millville.) To "Uncle Tom's Cabin" in the evening. Cold! Sold hogs at Cambridge City. Sold hogs. To election. (John) Snyder elected (Liberty Township trustee.) Jart. 7 Feb. 14 Asa Brown's widow buried. Butchered beef. Got auto plates. Rained all day. Roads awful slick. Did not go to church. 12o above zero. Home all day. Took more cold. 3' below zero. Vestal got auto battery off. Roads slick. No school. Home all day. Auto at Feb. 25 To town (New Castle) and to Apollo Club. 1951 Jan. 10 Vinton Ward died. Shirley Temple had a baby. Ja¡. Feb. My Jersey had a dead calf. On election boa¡d at Millville. Rained hard most Jan. 30 May 4 Jart. 25 29 of day. May 18 Made garden. Scraped sod off cemetery lane. Oct. 19 Oct.27 Nov. 7 Jan. 6 Jan. 20 1 con- test. Vestals. Ma¡. 10 Ma¡. 16 Apr. 28 Vint Boyd died. May May May 2 May 19 May 23 Nelson Cross died. Saw four dead men in week' Nice warm day. Jersey has blood poisoning. May Conwell died. Hot - 80o. To Ridgway funeral. At cemetery putting in bases. To Millville and town (New Castle) in the evening' Auto off. Big airplane crash near New Lisbon. Vaccinated pigs. Finished hay. To town (New Castle) in evening. To church and Sunday School. Began combining wheat. Picked berries. Boys cut big tree. Walter Miller died. Hottest since 1906. To town in a.m. Not feeling good. 12 16 July 13 July 14 July 15 July 16 Aug. 13 Sept. 27 Nov. Nov. Nov. Nov. 6 7 14 15 Nov. 28 Nov. 15 Dec.24 Dec. 28 Dallas Harry died. Big fire at New Lisbon. Paul McCormack elected mayor (of New Castle). AII poles and lines south of Millville down to Road 38. To church and Ed Waltz's funeral. Sold hogs at Blountsville. Rained all day. Farm Bureau meeting at Ashla¡d. 28". Sawed wood. To Mooreland in the a.m' Sold hogs at Blountsville. Rea gets a television. (Rea was Mr' Yauky's son.) Standard store in New Castle robbed of $5'000. Butchered hogs. Ike Covalt died. Jan. 15 Jan. 16 r953 Doctor told Orlo Pierce he had six months to live. Has cancer and a tumor. 20o. To John Deere Day. To see Orlo Pierce i¡r Jan.20 Jan. 30 evening. He is very discouraged. Greatest Presidential inauguration ever. Orlo (Pierce) died at midnight. I was there. No phone. Went to town for Main (Funeral Feb. 25 Tested calf. Got Orlo's suit. Some surprise. To town (New Castle) at noon for dinner. To Farlows in evening. They not in good humor. C. (Cha¡les) Miller and I appraise Pierce farm for $200 per acre. (The farm is presently owned by Mrs. Jesse Hagner. Donald Miller is the son of Charles.) Mar. My ?6th birthday. Pierce farm sold for Feb. 6 Feb. 7 May 13 15 9 June 8 June 14 April June 15 June 19 July July July July 4 20 22 27 July 31 July Sept. 4 Sept. 8 Sept.15 Sept. 28 Oct. 31 Nov. Nov. Nov. Nov. 1 Dec. Dec. Benjamin Strattan Parker: Man With a Cause first set aside one day each year to honor those Americans - our ancestors, our fathers, our husbands, brothers, sons, daughters - who have fallen in battle. It has been well over 100 years since we On Memorial Day or Decoration Day we mourn them, and we try once more to comprehend why so ghastly a thing as war exists and how its terrible harvests can be avoided. In Lewisville in 1863, while the Civil War was still going on, a pioneer school teacher and poet, who was born February 10, 1833, and raised just north of that community, wrote President Lincoln urging him to set aside one day each year to honor America's fallen heroes. As the dead were returned to Lewisville from the battlefields and hospitals of the wa¡, it was this teacher and poet and his associates who saw to it that flowers were placed on their graves as May came every year. Soon after the Civil War ended, he contributed articles and poems to the newspapers of this state and across the nation urging that a day be set aside in May for placing gifts of flowers upon the graves of Civil War soldiers. It is told that this teacher and poet when the funeral train carrying the remains of President Lincoln passed slowly through Lewisville on the morning of April 30, 1865, from Washington to Indianapolis and Springfield, boarded the train em upon the coffin. This friend of the others also distributed copies of a the funeral train memorializing the "Great Emaacipator." The next day several national newspapers reproduced the handbill. One of these handbills has somehow survived the passage of time and is on display at the Henry County Historical Society Museum. In 1868 President Andrew Johnson proclaimed the first national Memorial Day, three years after Lincoln's assassinaüion 4 15 18 11 17 Dec.27 Home). uNr0ltt HEilRT 2 S28,000. Claudiana (Claudia Ann Larson, his great-grandchild) operated on for appendicitis. 93'. Rained in a.m. I not good. 60'. To church. Leg bad. 78". Picked cherries and gooseberries. Rosenbergs (Julius and Ethel) die just before sundown, Frank Frazier died. Washed auto. My hip bad. Rainy. Hot. Sold chickens. Summit Taylor cut his finger off mowing. Hot. To town (New Castle) three times and to Mooreland twice. Senator (Robert A.) Taft died of cancer. First rain since August 8. Poor Carrie gone 24 years. (Ca¡rie was his wife). R.E.M.C. boys change poles in field. D. E. Bowman buried. Warmer. To doctor. Legs bad. Can't walk with- out cane. To church and Elmo Woods for dinner. Democrats feeling good again. So many elected. To church. Boys dig Cha¡les Stone's grave. Baker Pa¡k on fire. Ralph Manifold dead. Sarah Hutchens died. 5o below. To Hagerstown. Wright brothers 5O-year celebration. Big crowd. I fair. Nancy Bond told me to send her a baby ca¡d ten years from now. toullTlills and the end of the Civil War. And we a¡e certain that this smalltown teacher helped influence our national leader to proclaim such a day, for copies of his a¡ticles and poems urging such an observance have, somehow, survived over the yeals. Today he is remembered mainly because of the former elementary school in New Castle named in his honor. Quoting A Centenníal Landmark: A History of the New Castle Friends Meeting, 1881-1981 by Thomas D. Hamm and Wilma L. Kern: "At the beginning of this century he fit every qualification required for the title of public-spirited man: author, teacher, merchant, editor, public servant. Among his writings were five published volumes of poetry. The second, The Cabin in the Clearing, which appeared in 188?, attracted considerable notice, although today his works a¡e known to but few readers. Better known is an historical work, Poets and Poetry of Indiana, still favorably regarded by writers and historia¡s. While he did not achieve lasting fame as a writer, through his work with the Western Association of Writers and personal friendships, he encouraged the work of better-known authors like James \{hitcomb Riley and Booth Tarkington." It seems strange that an obscure teacher and poet residing in a small Indiana town at the close of the Civil Wa¡ could have so much influence; but it is not unusual that great movements are born in out-of-the-way places of our country. Who was this man? His name was Benjamin Strattan Parker, born in the Rich Square community, Franklin Township, Henry County, Indiana, of Quaker parents. Walter S. Chambers: He Loved His Hometown (Editor's note: The following story is from the November 18, 1985 edition of the New Castle Courier-Times.) Walter S. Chambers' father had wanted his son to follow in his footsteps and become a lawyer. When funds ran low, having had two years' work at Indiana University and a year atWisconsin, young Chambers came home to read law in his father's from F,tffi[ LELSVIETLD, IiTDI,,[NA, APRIL 8l0th, lt6õ. fr @ ÏilE MIilCTE OUA TEAA$ TTITH YOUN$! I Thre ,ãayior of ¿r Race, pHl' "oln ,AL,h st ls {.,t1{F4 TFTT; ihe ¡inÍa}icrarÅtron {l¡e Frion,l of, M.dhNKflNDHff Tliurnph¡ óver l)eath, anrl mounts Victoriotþty upwarilwlth åis olrl frmili¿w trear,l! Handbill written by Benjamin S. Pa¡ker and distributed on Lin- coln's funeral train by Parker and others. Hundreds were printed at the office of the "Ha¡cock Democrat," Greenfield, law office, in New Castle. \{hen Walter Chambers became editor of The Democrat,ntnning a newspaper amounted to doing the talking in the community for some political party, and there was nothing more natural than that he should hold a poll book in the fall and agree to take on the job of county chairman. In 1914 he was elected to the state senate, and served there until 1942 with the exception of the years from 1918 to L922 and 1926 to 1930, representing the joint district of Henry, Hancock and Madison counties. His record in the legislature was that of a liberal. He was relentless in his opposition to special privilege; was sympathetic to social reform legislation, and insistent in the protection of public morality. He was an advocate of Indiana's first prohibi tion law, and at his insistence woman suffrage was made a par- ty measure. With the thirties came social security legislation, in which he had by study and research prepared himself. He was called by Governor Paul V. McNutt to be chairman of a study commis' sion and the reports of this commission became the basis of In' diana's Social Security plan. He was influential in getting a special appropriabion of $10 million for Indiana University and a like amount for Purdue for the construction of new buildings. \{hen this amount in the regular budget seemed uncertain of passage, he helped gain support for it as a special measure. He served as chairman of the Democra''c State Committee from 1922 to 1926, and conducted the campaign which elected Samuel M. Ralston to the U.S. Senate. The Klan was rampant then in the state, and into communities where this issue had divided the party, he went telling party officials and candidates to suppcrt the ticket from "stem to stern" or resigrt. for distribution upon the platforms of the train cars. This copy was preserved by Dayton H. Fenstomaker and was presented to the Museum many years ago by Mrs. Sallie Fenstamaker. In the 1920's a good friend of Chambers wanted him to be- come the owner and editor of a newspaper in a certain large city. Two-thirds of the stock was for sale. "Buy it for what you think it is worth, and give them a check. I'll see that the money is in the bank, and you can repay me when you find it easy to do so," Chambers was told. Acceptance meant a $75,000 a year salary. His income never had been so much as one-tenth of that amount, a¡d the first of his five child¡en was about to enter college. It was a great temptation. But he was possessed of a profound wisdom of life and the offer was declined that he might continue to live in his own hometown with the people he loved. He was blessed after that with more than a quarter of a century in which to enjoy the persons and places so dear to him. For over 50 years prior to his death on March 13, 1951, the name of Walter S. Chambers and New Castle had been synonymous. He saw New Castle grow from a village and had an active part in its growth. There never vr'as a movement for the benefit of his hometown that he was not the leader, devoting his time and energy and his means towa¡d making New Castle a bigger and better place in which to live. Ernest Mills and nuv st"*li,-;;"rr*.. of our Past (Editor's note: The following article is reprinted from the January, 1986, issue of "Genealogy," a publication of the Family History Section of the Indiana Historical Society. Willard Heiss is editor of the publication and the author of this particular article.) The number of cemeteries in Indiana that a¡e abandoned or "lost" is incalculable. One might estimate 25 in each county, which would total 2,300. By adding small family plots, Chis esti mate might double. The West Union ma¡ker is located on the roadside. To do this, permission was secured from the Wayne County commission- ers. Nothing exists to the west except a plowed field a¡d OLD HOPEIIJELL CEMETIRY '415 \l0nt rfìnRK5 rHt c.rnrt R 0r rHt BURTRI ptí]r :t- : rìlnf klDl tn(,r rUt l:r BV sl\tin Rt-tD5 n0RIH sSuIH frT lH[ 0Rt(,tflnt :,Ii nt H0piUJil.t tRrtnû\ mttltní, ; t'' tltì(,1 f Rllttr ',./qìfìl'ì\ ( Rf tr( it/pPtR Stlrttmtnl) 'F. fRltfltì(, r',1ßÍJll:,lltD lltRt ln i8Z2'Ht tlRSl ,"t¡ï 'ìfì.,Rn11tlr fìtllCi[)l]': 8l)lì\/ ln HtnRV (0Unly tRfclFD t985 # a woods. What has been done by these dedicated retirees can be done by others. Just get up off your fat expectations and quit waiting for someone else to do it. Kindly, old Mr. Someone Else seldom gets a¡ound to it. From the October, 1985 "Indiana Friend" l.i '-.1 -a.: These patches of ground - forgotten, lost, unattended - are sometimes sea¡ched for by present-day descenda¡ts of those who were buried there. Ofüimes this is in vain, as many sites a¡e located in what is now the middle of a corn field. Few farmers a¡e affected with any sentiment for crumbling tombstones when plowing a field. Mechanical behemoths used in agriculture can pulverize marble in a season or two. That which survived generations of horse-drawn equipment is now quickly disappearing. Preservation of old cemeteries is beyond the efforts of most local historical or genealogical societies. They do well to get the tombstone inscriptions copied and preserved. In this area some remarkable efforts have resulted, Two examples from among many include Tipton County a¡d Greene County. Many persons sit on their fat expectations and bemoa¡ the loss of these patches of ground, but few hunch to their feet to do anything about it. Two of the few who did are Ray Stewart and Ernest Mills. Both a¡e recently retired and interested in history and Quakers. They are members of Hopewell Friends Meeting, which is located in southeastern Henry County, near Straughn. About a mile from the present meetinghouse Friends built a log meetinghouse in 1823 or 1824 on land belonging to Richard Ratliff. The building was also used for school purposes. Several years later a larger building was needed, a¡d a frame structure was built nea¡ the log meetinghouse. About this time the roads were being surveyed, and these buildings were left fa¡ from the new roads as they were cut through. It was soon decided to move the frame structure to what is now known as Hopewell corner. The house was put on heavy poles, the ends of which were inserted in holes of big pieces of wood shaped like great wheels. The power for locomotion was eight yokes of oxen. Thus it was moved to the destina- tion a mile away. The present meetinghouse was built in 1876 at a cost of $1,600. A new burying ground was started at the new location, and "Old" Hopewell was seldom used. After nearly a century of neglect it was acquired by the Fowler family (Mormons who have some concern for the dead). They fenced the plot and stop- ped the incursion of the plow. Ray Stewart and Ernest Mills, as a witness to their concerns for the future of such sites, have acquired and had set (with the help of others) a huge block of limestone. On it is inscribed: "Old Hopewell Cemetery. This stone marks the center of the burial plot nine rods east-west by seven rods north-south at the original site of Hopewell Friends Meeting first called Symons Creek (Upper Settlement). Friends established here in 1822the first organized religious body held in Henry County. Erected 1985." Subsequent owners should have no doubt as to the location and size of the ground used by the Hopewell Meeting. This is not to say that John Deere will not eventually have a farm tractor that would make short work of a block of limestone. Stewa¡t and Mills have located more modest markers at other locations nearby in Wayne County. These a¡e: Bethel Friends Cemetery, Meeting existed 1825-1878; Milford Friends Cemetery, Meeting existed 1819-1882; Milford Friends Meeting (Hicksite) and Cemetery, 1828-1911; and West Union Friencls Cemetery, 60 rods west, Meeting existed 1817-1829. POTITT ON TONTN¡BUT¡ONS OT TOTIECIIBLES TO THE HEIIRT TOUTITÏ Htsr0nE[t sf]clEîT !,lusÞu!,| The trustees of the Henry Counùy Historical Society will accept only objects to preserve in the Henry County Historical Society Museum which have been made, used or found in Henry County. Since our facitty is limited in space as time goes by, objects will be evaluated according to what space we have to exhibit, ca¡e for and preserve them. Evaluation will include potential use as educational tools to resea¡ch the history of Henry County. TIIE 1927 KNITHTSTOTYN ffIITENNIII With flags a¡d ba¡ners flyirrg, Knightstown ushered in its centennial birthday with a two-day celebration, August 23 and 24, 1927 , under the auspices of the local Kiwanis and Commercial Clubs and the local Federation of Women's Clubs. More than 3,000 visitors from Henr¡' County and other parts of the state attended. An extensive industrial exhibit, which included products made in Knightstown in 1927 and those that were made there years ago, was displayed on one side of the Public Square. On another side of the Square a fine exhibit of farm products was shown. Hundreds of interesting old relics, quainü old furniture, clothes of different periods, ancient guns and revolvers, muskets, knapsacks, old dishes and books, displayed in different store windows, attracted much attention. A particularly curious padlock, said to be more than 400 years old, brought from the Old World, and a mailbag carried on the stagecoach that plied between Indianapolis and Richmond in pioneer days, were also objects of special interest. One of the principal features of the celebration was the pageant presented at the Alhambra Theater. With a prologue and eleven episodes, the beginning of the little village on the banks of BIue River, the coming of Jonathan Knight in 1827 to choose a path for the National Road, the establishment of Knight's camp, the first Presbyterian Church, the first school, the first railroad in 1850, the period during the Civil Wa¡, the social side of the town life, the coming of natural gas, then later the period during the Spanish-American War and the World War, were well-portrayed. The closing act symbolized the hundred years of progress made by the town. The chief feature of the last day of the celebration was an elaborate parade. The commercial, agricultural and industrial life of the community was well-represented by many attractive floats, the parade and celebration terminating with a dance at the gymnasium. GET NEf,DT! GEl SET! For the Centennial observance of the Henry County Historical Society. 1887 - 1987 Plan on being a part of the year-long celebration' 50 * * * IIIDIT¡OIIil B¡TS OT HENNT COUNTT H¡SMNT (Continued from the Fall, 1983, the Spring, 1984 and the Fall, l9S4 "Historicalogs") Bob Hope performed at New Castle's Princess Theater during the days of vaudeville. The late Frank A. Wisehart practiced law in Middletown for sixty-five years. His son Robert is currently a lawyer in the * community. The town of Honey Creek was once nicknamed "Pucker Sta- tion." Lucille McKee (Berry) Beal and Gladys Gordnier organized the first Girl Scout troop in New Castle in 1917. * The famous editor, publisher, and presidential candidate Horace Greeley once lectured at Spiceland Academy. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * J. Douglas Reeves of Knightstown is president and chairman of the board of Hook's Drugs, Inc. His late father Norman P. Reeves served in the same capacity. Hook's, with 267 stores in India¡a and thirty-three in Illinois, Ohio and Kentucky, merged with the Kroger Company May 28, 1985. Otis Skinner, Francis X. Bushman, Busby Berkley and Irene Dunne were only a few of the famous stars performing at New Castle's Alcaza¡ theater. The famous Mt. Lawn Speedway west of New Castle celebrated its fiftiebh season of racing in 1985. A 1910 advertisement for the Lawter Sixteen, one of three automobiles manufactured in New Castle: "It is a four-passenger car, real seat removable, making a splendid runabout or fa¡mer's delivery. It is fitted with Swinehart's endless clincher tires, or pneumatics, at the option of the purchaser. In addition to being a car of splendid appearance, it is built right throughout and especially designed to see hard service at any season of the year. We predict that the Lawter Sixteen will be a winner, and that they may be in great demand for the season of 1910." In 1980 Henry County had the highest teenage pregnancy rate (2l.\Vol in the State of Indiana. The rate in 1984 was may still be found in the vicinity of his former Spicelald * * * farms northwest of Knightstown. Mattie Talbot Fay was the first art teacher in a Henry County school. She went to Spiceland Academy to teach in 1879. Joseph Yount built the first brick house in Middletown, just a yea¡ or so prior to 1856. Dr. Robert Summers buiìt the town's second brick residence. Fra¡k Summers' home on Locust Street was probably the third such structure. The brick home presently serving as the Balla¡d and Shirey Funeral Home was also built at an early date. The Montezuma Hayloft of Haymakers was chartered in Fall Creek Township in 1892 with James O. Painter as the first Chief Haymaker. Barba¡a P. Bush, the vice-president's wife, was the featured speaker at an adult literacy conference at Bundy Auditorium, New Castle, May 13, 1985. After her remarks she was presented a 1948 volume of Ross Lockridge's novel Raintree Countyby Dr. Philip L. Borders, Superintendent of the New Castle Community School Corporation, who wouldn't explain how he had acquired the ra¡e early edition of the novel set in Henry County. With a straight face Mrs. Bush asked Dr. Borders, "Do I have to return it to the library?" home.) Nativity of Henry County's United States-born residents, according to the 1850 census: Ohio 1,907; Kentucky 321; Pennsylvania 1,147; Virginia 1,486; North Ca¡olina 1,836; New York 83; Tennessee 189; Ma¡yland 170 and New England 36. The automotive history at New Castle's Chrysler plant was interrupted somewhat by World War II during which time the facility played a major role in defense activities. The plant produced millions of .50 caliber ammunition cores, 20 mm projectiles, 150 separate parts for the Bofors gun, aircraft land gear parts and tank engine parts. The New Castle plant was awarded the Army-Navy "E" pennant for excellence in production. The awa¡d was renewed three times before the close of the war. Where better than Indiana to make a movie about basketball in Indiana? And how about Knightstown in particular? For a few months in 1985 Hoosiers got a chance to be in "Hoosiers," a $7 million Hollywood film about a small town basketball team's rise to the pinnacle of high school glory. Hundreds of Knightstown residents had the opportunity to be movie "extras." Shots of the "home" team were filmed in the old. Knightstown g'ym and locker rooms. School scenes were shot at Nineveh (Johnson County) and town scenes were shot t7.3Vo. Cathoìics first began settling in New Castle in 1839. The first mass was celebrated in 1849 by Rev. \{illiam Doyle of Richmond, Maude Risk James, mother of eighty-four-year-old Marion G. Risk of Spiceland, passed away in 1984 at the age of 103. Remember when the V-8 tomato juice drink was made at the Louden Packing Company at Shirley? Over 300,000 persons from throughout the United States and severa-l foreign countries attended the 1985 Farm Progress Show, held October 1, 2, and 3 on the Ma¡tin and Haase Writing in Trees of Indiana many yea¡s ago about the pawpaw, the "Hoosier banana," Charles Deam, the Dean of Indiana forestry, reported: "Some relish the fruit, while others reject it. The late Arthur W. Osborn (1859-1924) of Spiceland was much interested and made an effort to find the most palatable forms of the fruit. He reports that he knew of a lady whose skin would become irritated by the presence of pawpaws. He also reported that some individuals, after eating the fruit, would develop a rash with intense itching. In one instance, he peeled a pawpaw and fed it to the subject with a spoon so that the person never touched the fruit and the results were the same." (Editor's note: Even though Arthur Osborn has been dead over sixty years numerous paw¡raw trees in New Richmond (Montgomery County). The movie, starring Gene Hackman, is based loosely on the 1954 basketball squad of tiny Milan High School. With three seconds left on the clock, it knocked off giant Muncie Central 32-30 in the state championship game and became a symbol of Indiana's passion for basketball. And so during October, November and December it was "cameras, lights and action" in Knightstown as residents got out their 19õ0s clothing and headed for the bleachers of the old gym for their chance to appear for a few fleeting moments on the silver screen. Knights- town insurance agent Dick Leakey and attorney Ed Dunsmore were given substantial acting parts in the film. * Former Middletown resident Ross Grimsley once pitched for the Cincinnati Reds. * The late Gladys Colburn of New Castle was a former dancer in the "Ziegfeld Follies." * In 1918 New Castle defeated Noblesville in a basketball game. The score: 112 to 0. l|. * * * Honey Creek, the little stream meandering through Fall Creek Township, was so named because of the "bee trees" that lined its banks. These were black locusts, the blossoms of which attracted honeybees. The bees lived in the trees that were hollow and stored their winter's supply of honey there. Middletown's Van Noy movie theater opened September 2, 1945. The featured picture that day was "Black Gold." The theater closed in the early 1970s. The Middletown Volunteer Fire Department was organized in 1896 when water hydrants were installed in the town. The original hose cart, pulled by man, is displayed today at the fire station. Who remembers the Rozell House, a popular Mooreland hos- telry at the turn of the century? * * * * When Charles R. Ernest and Anna Sanders made application for a marriage license in July of 1881, someone in the county clerk's office made this notation on the application: "Don't publish or someone will be butchered." Eli Herman erected a distillery in Jefferson Township in 1839-40. Employing twelve men, the price of the whiskey was eighteen cents a gallon. Much of the whiskey was hauled to Cincinnati for sale. Strange bub true: Washing machines a¡d mittens were once made in Millville. Who remembers \{ise's Smorgasbord restaurant at Honey Creek? The accommodations were not quite like the Waldorf, * but the food was excellent. Schools once located in Jefferson Township: Hale, Bouslog, Mud Hole, Gorman, Sanders, Lyons, Chapman, Maple Grove, and, of course, Sulphur Springs Elementary and High School. * In the files of the Henry County Historical Museum is a handwritten copy of Vol. 1, No. 1 of the "Hawk Eye News," written by some industrious Grant City resident long before the turn of the century. The paper's motto: "Not how much, but how well." Terms: "Patience and good attention." Office: "V¿ mile west of Custer's Store on the mud road." * During the winter of 1922 William and Susan Schaffer were found hatcheted to death - gangland style - nea¡ their Honey Creek home. Their bodies were found by a couple of men whose ca¡ broke down in front of the Schaffer home. Cries of a child atbracted the men to the house and upon entering bhe dwelling they found the body of Mrs. Schaffer, still clad in her night clothing, on the bed. The hatchet was found on a table in the kitchen. Beside Mrs. Schaffer's body, suffering from hunger, thirst and cold was little Billy Huffstickler, bhree-year-old nephew of Mrs. Schaffer. Perched on the bed, snapping at all intruders, was a poodle dog. Evidence indicated the boy and dog had lived on bread and water in the death house for several days. Investigators found liquor (then illegal) and a hypodermic needle in the house, and it was suggested that the farm 'vas a "half-way" stop for peddlers of liquid contraband. The murder was never solved. * A Dr. Griest once practiced medicine at Kenna¡d. He later moved to Alaska and was part of the rescue party that searched for and found Will Rogers and Wiley Post following their fatal air crash in 1935. * According to Miles Ma¡shall, Henry County has the distinction of having no waters flowing into it - only out from. Stony Creek and Buck Creek head up in Henry, flow out and The old Knightstown High School gymnasium is the locale for the home games in the movie "Hoosiers." Photo from the October, 1985 "Indianapolis Monthly" magazine. * streets. By 1910 the principal streets - South Main, Broad, llth, 12th and 14th - had been paved. Before 1900 electricity was used very little in New Castle homes. Before 1900 there were many blacksmith shops in New Castle but noi a plumber. By 1910 there were a half dozen livery barns in town but not a single garage. Prior to 1900 there were no gasoline stations. Today there a¡e many. Before 1900 practically every home was enclosed with a fence to keep out cows and * * * back in. Henry County also provides one of the state's largest rivers with its sources. Big Blue River and Flat Rock both head up in Blue River Township and flow several miles apart but parallel for a hundred miles then converge near Edinburg to form Driftwood Creek. A couple of miles downstream Driftwood converges with Sugar Creek which, a hundred miles upstream, has sprung out of a field tile in Harrison Township of Henry County. The confluence of Driftwood and Sugar Creek is the headwaters of the East Fork of White River which is the largest tributary to the Wabash. * Aloysius James "4. J." Carr of Knightstown, born in 1894' invented the first corrugated paper machine in the 1920s. Inberviewed February 18, 1986, he stated that during Worlrl Wa¡ I he flew small planes over France as a member of the U.S. Marines. According to Mr. Ca¡r in those days bombs were dropped directly from the cockpit. Since technology wasn't as precise as today, he and his crew would drop a bomb about two miles from its target, depending on wind velocity. "And we bombed trenches, not cities," he said. * Citizens State Bank, New Castle, may be the oldest statechartered bank in Indiana. Citizens has Indiana Bank Cha¡ter No. 3, dated July 3, 18?3, just three days after the state's banking laws went into effect. The question is, then, who received cha¡ters I and 2? No ba¡k with those numbers has been found. The names may have changed, possibly through consolidations or acquisitions, or they may simply have gone oub of business. Before 1900 not a single automobile was seen on the streets of New Castle. Prior to 1900 New Castle had no paved other animals running at large. The new West Lawn addition to South Mound Cemetery, Nqw Castle, was officially dedicated on Memorial Day, 1982. The first "baby show" or "baby review" in New Castle took place February 5, 1886. The roller skating craze hit Spiceland in 1888. The New Castle "Courier" recorded the phenomena as follows: "Even Spiceland, the New Jerusalem of Eastern Indiana, is said to be nursing a mild case of the deadly craze. Shades of William Penn! Spiceland with all her piety, morality, christianity and . . . It is regarded as a thing of the past and is cherished only as a relic of antiquity and no well regulated progressive town in the Indi- prohibition encouraging a roller skating rink * * * Ì ana gas belt can afford to support one. Spiceland should introd-rc¿ a reform." Approximabely 40Vo of the 52,000 people in Henry County co-rld be seated in the five high school gyrnnasiums in the county. This fact dramatically illusbrates the importance placed on basketball by the residents of the Hoosier State. New Castle's 9,325 seat facility is billed as the largest high school fieldhouse in the world. Shortly after Lewisville's Guyer Opera House opened June 3, 1901, the touring show "Ten Nights in a Ba¡room" played there. Henry County's average media¡ household income in 1984 was $16,168, 51st in the state. The average median famity income was $18,636, or 54th best in the stat'e. Our county in 1984 ranked 40th in the number of residents who a¡e below the poverty level. The study showed that 10.1 percent of bhe county's population was below the poverty level. And 8.3 percent of the families ranked below the poverty level. * Mt. Summit Natural Gas Company was formed May 24, 1888, for the purpose of "boring, sinking and constructing natural gas wells and to mine coal and to dig and bore for coal, oil and water and to furnish and supply fuel and light and water and do such other manufacturing, mining and mechanical business as may be determined by such company." And you guessed it. Several familia¡ Mt. Summit and The * Betty O'Neal Giboney, for years a reporter at the New Castle "Courier-Times," used to perform as a dancer at New York's Roxy Theater. TIPTON Prairie Township families signed the a¡ticles of association Rifner, Veach, Bouslog, Ice and Beavers, only to mention a few. HAMILTON HA MOORETANDT2 \ I WILBUR IYRIGHT BIRÎH Ì.flNIRY I ..AYE RUSHYILLE ¡ FI FRAI st. ?AUt A LOMEW LQ MBUS It IPLI NNINGS KSO CK JEFFF. R Flat Rock meanders to the southwest from its point of origin in Blue River Township. The flow of Big Blue River. Origin in Blue River Township near Mooreland. BEVOIUNONINT WIN SONENS BUN¡ED III TEilNT MUilTT on horseback to the battle site, intending to deliver clothing (Editor's note: In 1976 the booklet "Henry County Celebrates the Bicentennial" was published by the Henry County Historical Society as part of our contribution to America's year-long birthday celebration. In the publication mention was made of the Revolutionary \{ar veterans buried in Henry County. Now, ten years later, additional information has been gathered on many of these old soldiers. Recent research suggests that one or two of the veterans in the 1976 list actually lived and died outside Henry County and should, therefore, be eliminated from our initial findings. Thus, a series of additions and corrections are in order. We are delighted Thomas D. Hamm found the time to make them for us.) John Bouslog (17õ6-Apr.4, 185õ) Born in Germany. Settled in Prairie Township in 1828. Buried in the Harvey Cemetery, Prairie Township. Original stone, but no mention of Revolutionary service. Married Catherine (maiden name unknown). Jacob Brown (Jan. 14, 1755-June 9, 1831) Born in Guilford County, North Ca¡olina. Buried in the Flat Rock Friends Cemetery, Liberty Township. Government marker erected in 1983. Revolutiona¡y service: Enlisted August 10, 1?80, in the North Carolina Militia. He served as a private un- der Gen. Greene and took part in the Battle of Guilford Courthouse. Ma¡ried Mary Armfield in North Ca¡olina November 1, 1776. She was also at the battle mentioned. Mrs. Brown went and provisions to her husband. Mary Brown, born March 29, 1759, died in 1827 or 1828 and is buried in ¿n unmarked grave in the Flat Rock Friends Cemetery. Revel Colburn (Sept. 16, 1764-Sept.4, 1838) Born in North Carolina. Came to Henry County with his wife, Margaret, Nov. 22, 1827, settling in New Castle, to be near their daughter and son-in-law, Sally and George Hobson. They brought with them from North Carolina probably the first glass mirror to grace a New Castle home. Even though advanced in years, Revel taught several terms of school after arriving in New Castle. Buried in the Hobson Cemetery (sometimes called the 9th Street Cemetery), New Castle, now the site of the gth Street Wesleyan Church. Revolutionary service: In 1?80, when he was 16 years old, he volunteered to go to \Ãrar as a substitute for a man who had been d¡afted. He served in Captain William Polk's Company and was promoted to lieutenant. A friendship sprang up between the young soldier and his superior officer which led to the marriage of Lt. Colburn to Captain Polk's daughter, Margaret (1768-1837). Mrs. Colburn, a doctor who practiced after coming to Henry County, is also buried in the Hobson Cemetery. Both gtaves are unma¡ked. They had at least 8 children. Richa¡d Conway (1760 or 1762-185õ?) Born in Queen Anne County, Maryland. Came to Henry County in 1821 from Wayne County and purchased 160 acres of land in Liberty Township on December 5 of that year. On December 11, 1823, he purchased 80 acres in what is now Blue Riv- er Township. Buried in the Kissinger Cemetery, Blue River Township, located south of Mooreland on the Brown Road. A government stone was erected in1922. The cemetery, small and in poor condition, occupies a portion of the land Mr. Conway puichased in 1823. Revolutionary service: Living in Hampshire ate County, Virginia, at nia in Captain Meal's C ain Regiment. In 1781 John Simeral in Col. Holmes' Regiment. Applied for a government pension Nov. 13, 1832. He may be th whom there a¡e estate papers on file in Watson in Kentucky. Supposedly Mrs. Co the Kissinger Cemetery. They had at least 5 child¡en. Rodrick Craig hair and blue eyes. 1780, at Botetcourt sylvania County, Vi died in June, 1847, in Henry CountY. Samuel Griffith (June 13, 17õ5-Dec. 25' 1838) Born in Da¡tmouth, Massachusetts. He is believed to have settled and died in Fall Creek Township. D.A.R. records indicate this and an old countY historY came to Fall Creek TownshiP in father with them." Revolutionary Canaan, New York. Orderly sergeant in Captain John Smith's Company. Discharged November 16,ll79.In 1?80 he was a private in Captain Jonathan \ilarner's Company. Ebenezer Harper (Jan., 1740-Aug. 14, 1835) (174O-t8441 Hugh Healey Becky (maiden name unknown). Caleb Dille (1759-1839) fi¡st sheriff of Henry County. Philip Hedrick (1755-1833) Born in Germany. Settled in Franklin Township in 1822. Buried in the Ebenezer Baptist Cemetery, Franklin Township. tation, Washington County Militia. (1?61-1834) in 1781. She was born in Government stone. Revolutionary service: Captain in Col' John in the Pioneer'Cemetery. They were Matt Farley (Oct. 29, 1?59'Feb. 2l '18311 Born in Culpeper or Chesterfield County, Vi¡Cinia' q3d sgtbled in Frankún-Township, purchasing two 80-acre plots inr farm in an un- Patton's Battalion, Berks County, Pennsylve'ia Militia, Jan' 26, 1776. May 12, 1?80 listed as Captain of 5th Company, 2nd Battalion. His first wife, name unknown, died before 1795. They had 2 children. His second wife was Lovicey (maidgn nq19 unknown). Two child¡en resulted from this marriage. In 1927 for generations, an exhaustive stone left to de- Thomas Hilman was present at Vincennes when Clark recaptured the fort in 1??9 from the British commander Col. Henry "The Hair Buy- er" Hamilton. After the Revolution (during the 1790s) he ing in Virginia and Ohio. Bo from near and dren' Aa¡on Dunn (Ma¡. ?, 1?63-SePt. 25' 1843) Born in northeastern Pennsylvania. Probably buried in Prairie Township. Revolutiona¡y service: 1781 drafted in company of Captain Ãndrew Millikin's in Ulster County, New Yo¡k' Dischareìd four months later. In 1782 agar\ d¡afted in Goshen, Oran-ge County, New York, in Captain John \{ood's Company of militia for three -o.tnT*U", (June 10, 1?53-Jan'' "". 1842) Lived in Henry County the last four or five years of his life' Place of burial unkno*n. He was 5 feet 10 inches tall, had da¡k Jacob Houser (1758?-July, r842) to HenrY CountY wiüh his wife to be Ditch. The Ditch corner of LibertY 1777.Married about 1783 Lovicey Brombaugh who died before 1820. He then married Hannah (maiden name unkno$rn). A 1841, is on file in the eum. Four children are s will reads as follows: ah, three beds and bed- ding with six quilts and one coverlid, one copper kettle . . one little wagon, one sorrel horse, also the dresser ware in the dresser, one milk cow and one heifer, four head of sheep, one breeding sow with two shoats, one bureau, one dining table, th¡ee Windsor chairs and rocking chair, and I give and bequeath to my said wife my present home place consisting of 80 acres of land for her lifetime . ." John Hubbell (Sept., 1754-APr. 17, 1834) Born in New Jersey. Settled in Dudley or Liberty Township in 1829. Buried in the Leakey-Wisehart Cemetery, Liberty Township. Grave ma¡ked by original stone and a government stone. Revolubionary service: Enlisted 17?? under Col. Matthew Ogden, New Jersey Line. Private, 1st New Jersey Regi ment and later Sergeant in New Jersey Line for 5 years. John Hubbell ma¡ried Mary Robertson in 1778 aad they had a family of 8 children. Mary Hubbell is also buried at Leakey-Wiseha¡t. It is thought by some that she died in 1864 at the age of 105, although there are no dates on her tombstone and definite proof has not been uncovered. John and Mary Hubbell were the grandparents of Civil War general William Grose. And¡ew Ice (Oct.16, 17õ7-Mar. 13, 1848) Born in Hampshire County, Virginia. Settled in Henry County in 1832, in Prairie Township. He was buried on the fa¡m of his son, Frederick Ice, near Hillsboro, but his remains were later removed to the Mt. Summit Cemetery. The D.A.R. erected a government stone over the gtave in 1907. Revolutionary service: Private in Virginia troops, 1777; 6 months under Captain Owen Davy and Col. Zaccheus Morgan. In 1778, 6 months under Captain Brinton and Col. Charles Eva¡s and was out against the Indians in the "Northwest." Also served 2 months under Captain Jacob Prickett at Scott's Mills and 2 months under Captain Warman at Ha¡rison's Fort. Ma¡ried twice. His first wife was Mary Boyles (1763-?). His second wife was Sa¡ah Hudson Fleming, the widow of William F. Fleming. George J. Isham (Aug.17,1843) Settled in Wayne Township and no doubt buried there, but exact location unknown. Revolutionary service: Enlisted at Colchester, Connecticut, for 3 years and served under the name "Jonathan" Isham, Honorably discharged at Morristown, New Jersey. In battles of Stony Point and Monmouth. Wounded in left a¡m. where his wife is buried. Revolutionary service: Early in the war he drove a baggage wagon, was afterwa¡ds assistant wagon master and forage master. He was subsequently promoted to captain in the New Jersey Militia and served until the close of the war. Fought in the Battle of Monmouth. Ma¡ried Esther Heabh (1765-18a6) and they had a family of 11 children. Christopher Long (May, 1746-Aug. 14, 1829) Born in Culpeper County, Virginia. Mr. Long lived in th¡ee Virginia counties - Culpeper, Botetcourt and Henry - before moving in 1807 to Gallia, Jackson County, Ohio. Settled in Liberty Township in 1821. Buried with his wife, Sa¡ah T\¡rner Long, at the intersection of county roads 200 South and 500 East in Liberty Township, near the site of the old Devon (Boyd) School. Monument is 9Yz feet high and is surrounded by an iron railing. The monument was erected by a grandson in 187?. Revolutionary service: Private at Great Bridge, Norfolk, Virginia, December, 1?75, in Lord l)unmore's War; Private in New Jersey, 1776. At Valley Forge 1777-1778 and took part in the Battle of Guilford Courthouse in North Ca¡olina. A color sergeant at the Bat0ìe of Yorktown in 1781. Name appears in list of 6 Long brothers of Culpeper County, Virginia, who served throughout the war. Sarah Turner ma¡ried Christopher Long in Culpeper County in 17?3. Mrs. Long died September 11, 1822 in her 66th year. Her death was the first recorded in Liberty Township. Jacob Morris (Mar. 22, 1 763-Oct. 27, 18401 Born in Middlesex County, New Jersey. Served at various times in New Jersey Militia between 1778 and 1781 under Captain Jacob Piatt and Captain Garrison as a spy and as a substi tuti¡ foi his uncle William Armstrong. He moved from New Jersey to Kentucky in 1805 and to Wayne County, Indiana, in 1838. By 1840 he was living in Wayne Township, Henry Coun- tY' John McDonard (Sept., 17õ8-Dec. 12, L8451 Born in King George County, Virginia. Living in Henry County in 1835 and received a pension that year. Revolutionary service: Served under Captain John Poindexter in Bedford County, Virginia. Ma¡ried Elizabeth English. Buried in the Pioneer Bap- tist cemeterv' KnightstowÏiuo po*utt (r739?-1833?) John Keesling (Mar. 25, 1759-Dec. 25, 1839) Born in Virginia, although two sources say Berks County, Pennsylvania. Lived in Preble County, Ohio before moving to Indiana. Settled in Fall Creek Township with his wife and 5 sons in 1827, purchasing land near present-day Mechanicsburg. There is some evidence indicating that he came to Henry County as early as 1824, although he did not purchase land until 1827. Buried in Fatic Cemetery, Fall Creek Township. Govern- Came to Henry Township, Henry County, in 1819. Buried on the grounds of the New Castle Developmental Center with his son-in-law Alan Shepherd (1781-1832). Graves marked in 1976. Revolutiona¡y service: Served in the New Jersey Militia. Applied for a Revolutionary pension in Henry County in 1833. Unfortunately, the papers apparently have been lost. stone's Company as a substitute for his father, Jacob; from November, 1776, 2 months in Captain Lindemoot's Company; in 1777,2 months in Captain Lindemott's Company, a¡d in 1779, 2 months as a wagoner. Ma¡ried Eve Miller in Wythe County, Virginia in 1788. Mrs. Keesling was born Feb. 21, 1762 and died months under Captain Jacob Rinker. Enlisted again in May, 1781 for 3 weeks as a private under Captain Rinker and Col. Darke. Enlisted Sept., 1781, for 2 months under Captain Auld and Col. Da¡ke. Present at the Battle of Yorktown. Married Mary Coffma¡ (1?66-1863). Father of 6 children. Orr Scovell ment stone. Soon after arriving in Henry County, one son, Daniel, was killed in a fall from a horse. He was the first person buried in the Fatic Cemetery where his father was later buried. Revolutionary service: Enlisted at Reading, Berks County, Pennsylvania, and served with the Pennsylvania troops as follows: From Sept., 1776, 2 months in Captain Jacob Whet- October 4, 1804. After the death of his first wife, John Keesling married Barbara Staley. Nathaniel Leona¡d (Oct. 10, 1749-Oct.13, 1824) Born in Trenton, New Jersey and settled in Henry County in 1824. Buried originally in the Herr Farm Cemetery, Dudley Township. Remains removed to the New Lisbon Cemetery, Dudley Township, August 23, 1960. Grave marked by original stone. Interestingly enough, there is also a government stone for him in South Lawn Cemetery, Dublin, Wayne County, George Rinker (1766-Mar.3, 1843) Born in Virginia and settled in Fall Creek Township, purchasing 80 acres Oct. 9, 1835. Buried in the Painter Cemetery, Fall Creek Township. Original stone, but no mention of Revolutionary service. (Editor's note: There is some confusion on Mr. Rinker. The D.A.R. records state that he was born in La¡caster County, Pennsylvania,inlTS2 and died Dec. 11, 1835). Revolutionary service: Enlisted October, 1780, in Virginia. Served 6 (1767-May 6, 1850) Born in New Jersey and settled in Wayne Township in 1824. Buried in the Raysville Cemetery. Grave ma¡ked by the original stone, but no mention of Revolutionary service. At the time of his death he lived on what was later called the Graham fa¡m, near the "Old Stone Quarry Mill" in Spiceland Township. Revolutionary service: Served in a New Jersey of Connecticut regi ment. Married Lydia (maiden name unknown) who died April 24, 1855, aged 70 years, 3 months and 29 days. She is also huried at Ravsville. John See (Oct. r0, I767-Jan.2,1834 or 1837) firsl twelve lots sold. Mr. Tackett was a member of lhe Henry County Board of Justices from 1825 until 182?. Harman Wayman eleven of the (Aug. 14, 1?50-Jan. 20, 1837) Born in Culpeper County, Virginia. Place of burial uncertain. Certain evidence indicates he.might be buried in Boone County tionary service: Served as a private in the Virginia Militia. Ma¡ried Sðpftmber 3, 1?80, Margaret Ja¡rett (1761-183?). They had a familY of 9 children Joel simmons (June 10, 1757-SePt.4' 1838) Born in Albemarle County, Virginia. Settled in Jefferson Township. marked Ëy in 1??6 for Grave enlisted 1777 lor 1 month under William Davis. In 1?79 or 1780 he served 6 months under Henry Burke, James Ma¡tin, and Col' Hola Richa¡dson. Father of l0 children' S"-uel Stanley (1?54-July 7, 1840) Born in Ha¡over County, Virginia. Came to Henry Cot'nty about 1830 with one of his several child¡en, settling in Dudley Friends about Jan. 2,1782. Henry Williamson (Ja¡. 6, 1749-MaY 4, 18321 Born in New Jersey. Came to Henry County around 1830 and of burial unknown. Revolution- st Regiment, New JerseY Line, He served in Canada, fought in the Battle of Three Rivers, a¡d was discharged at Fort Ticonderoga. In 1?76 and1777 he was called into service in the New Jersõy Militia and was present at the battles of Trenton, Prince- ton, Morristown, and Germantown. Ma¡ried in 7777 to Anna (maiden name unknown), born April 3, 1757, died after 1842 in Jasper County, Illinois. They had nine children' They lived in Sorierset County, New Jersey, until 1812, when they moved to Scioto County, Ohio. Jacob Wimmer (Oct. 23, 1762-June 7, 1838) ever, he Vz mile Friends e: Served from Bedford and was Present at Yorked ending the Revolution. Ma¡ried Susanna Tennyson (1766-1838) who is also buried at Hopewell. At the time his will was written in early 1840, !e had S living children. The witl is on file in the Henry County Historical Society Museum. Lewis Tackett Born in Somerset County, New Jersey and settled in Liberty Buried in the family cemetery on his fa¡m cent to the railroad). Some state that a tombat the grave site and a photo of it was on file at the Henry Co. Historical Society Museum. Neither can be found. Jacob Wimmer, Jr., the Revolutionary veteran, is unique in the fact that when he came to Henry County, he brought with him his father, Jacob Wimmer, Sr., who was born July 12, 1?33 and died in 1821. This Jacob Sr. supposedly served in the French and Indian Wa¡ (1?54-1763). Revolutionary service: Volunteered in 1778 in Somerset County, New Jersey. Served terms under Captains Stout and Murphey in Gen. \{inan's command. In 1??9 he served 6 months under Captain Lott, Col. marker on the front lawn of the Knightstown Public Library, dedicated to the memory of the Revolutionary soldiers of Henry County. Listed on the plaque a¡e the names of three additional veterans who once lived in Henry County but were not buried here. They are: * James Stinson or Stevenson (Dec. 10, 1754-May 24, 18451Settled in Henry Township in1822, but living at the time of his death in Wayne County. Buried in the Jacksonburg Cemetery, Wayne County. Government stone. * William Wilson (1?39-1843?). Born in County Armagh, Ireliving in as a resi- r to 1843 assumed that he is buried in St. Joseph County as his last pension payment was made October 11, 1843. * Isaac Cox or Cocks (1?55-1832?). May have lived in Henry County for Township, in Marylan The late Buried in Indiana says that Jacob Pickering (1750-1832) died in Henry County. All other indications, however, suggests that he died and was buried in Harrison County, Ohio. The Webster Parry Papers also say that Daniel Presnall (1748-1830), buried at Greensboro, was,a Revolutionary soldier. Little evidence exists to substantiate this claim. A John Shadlow mentioned in the 1976 list, as a Revolutionary soldier was probably John Shetlaw (1?88-f852), buried in the White Union Cemetery, Fall Creek Township. Could it be that this man's service in the War of 1812 was confused with the Revolution? Robert Watkins mentioned in the 1976 booklet lived and died in Delaware County. On November 13, 1832, Ebenezer Heaton and Benjamin Fort, probable Wayne Township residents, made application for Revolutionary pensions. This information is found in the county probate data. lowilsnrP oncfiilrzlîtoil IENNT MUilTT SCAOü SUPEN¡ilTE¡IIIEIITS Name Enos Adamson... George Hufford. Timothy Wilson W. R. Wilson F. A. Cotton.... Joseph A. Greenstreet... William F. Byrket JosephA. Greenstreet... William F. Byrket H. B. Roberts... J. H.Eilar A. F. Byrne T.DonEdington * Hershel D. Ank¡om Term ...1873-18?5 ....18?5-18?7 .....1877-1883 . .1883-1889 ....1889-1895 ...1895-189? Township Dudley. Founding Date . June 7I, t822 ... Wayne.... Prairie. . . Liberty. . . . . Stony Creek ...1900-1902 FaIl Creek. Franklin. . . . .1902-1907 Greensboro. . . .189?-1900 ....1907-1926 ....1926-1933 . . .1933-193? .....1937-1963 .June 11,7822 June 11, 1822 .June I7, L822 .Feb.12,1823 . Nov. 11, 1828 . August, 1829 Henry..... Harrison. . Spiceland. ..Jan.5, . . Sept. 7, 1831 . Nov. 7, 1838 ...June, . Jefferson.., Blue River. 1830 . 1842 . .Sept.5,1843 . .June 6, 1848 . .1963-1966 *Note: Mr. Ankrom was the last county school superintendent. The office was discontinued as a resúlt of school reorgâni zation. IEilNT MUillT III I9TO ilEWSPff[nS 0r [Eilnï [ouilTr t9E6 "The Courier-Times" (Daily New Castle). Founded in 1841 by John W. Grubbs. "îli-County Banner" (Weekly Knightstown). Formerly the "Knightstown Banner."- Founded in 186? by John A. Deem. "Middletown News" (Weekly Middletown). Founded - in 1885. "Eastem lndiana Farmer" (Weekly - Knightstown). Founded by R. Thomas Mayhill. "Tri-State Trader" (Weekly Knightstown). Founded in 1968 by R. Thomas Mayhill."Henry County News Republican" (Weekly - New Castle). Founded in 1931 by J. H. Parker. Education + 67 school houses * 13 high schools * 218 teachers * $532,600 (value of school property) Agriculture * 2,500 farms t 94.9 (average acres per farm) t $27,000,000 (value of farm property) * $82.86 (average value of land per acre) Population * 29,758 (total county population) * 465 (of foreign birth) {' 7,661 (families) * '1,422 (dwellings) Railroads (Steam) * c.&o. * Ft. Wayne, Cincinnati * c.w.&M. * Big Four & Louisville 'r' (108.29 total railroad mileage) Railroads (Electric) * Indianapolis, New Castle & Eastern Traction Co. * Terre Haute, Indianapolis & Eastern Traction Co. * Union Traction Co. of Indiana * (S6.tt total electric railroad mileage) TO BRTIIG BICK UEUONþS Some Things You Don't Know About I\EW CASTLE THE SPRINGPORT MUSEUM FOUNOED lN NEW YORK CITY lN t8il6 BY E. M' IIORIH SPRINGPORT, INDIANA SHE HAS About 15,000 Population EDUCATIONAL AND ENTERTAININGI A GOOE) PLACE TO SPENO THE DAY, PICNIC PARTIES ESPECIALLY WELCOME Police Department CHAS. O. EDì^,AROS. MGR. 2 with 9 men Fire Departments with Business card publicizing Professor E. M. I{orth's museum at Springport. Opened in 190?, it burned in 1916. From the Museum files. 13 men 4 Railroads 2 Traction Lines 6 School Buildings 15 Churches 2 Daily Papers 4 Banks 8 Lodges 4 Theaters 3 Hotels It's Spring! Clean Up Your Car Now Protect lVashing 'Polishing - Simonizing CROW SATES CO Spring,1986 No.1 12 Drug Stores 52 Groceries 5 Shoe Stores 3 Hardware Stores 5 Jewelery Stores 17 Re$taurants 2 20 Laundries Dodtors 11 DentiSts I Multigraph Shop CO. .F.RESH ROASTED COFFEE EVERY DAI WILL FEGLEY. Prop2()6 S. MÂIN ST. PEED'S MEAT MARKET 1126 W. Broad Vol.14 Wholesale Grocery 3 Drygoods Stores 7 Clothing Stores ROSE CITY TEA & COFFEE Call 28 Today for your Appointment THE HENRY COUNTY HISTORICÂLOG f Factories OUR AIM IS TO FLEASE YOU. WILL Yc'U HELP US BY TELLING US WHAT YOU LIKE? it for Summer Driving From the New Castle "Cou¡ier-Times" April 13, 1945. 15 This undated New Castle advertisement is from the Museum files. Non Profit Org. U. S, POSTAGE PAID Permit No. 67 Published twice a year by the Henry County Historical Society, Inc., 606 South 14th Street, New Castle, Indiana 47362. Richard Pickering Ratcliff, Editor, 303 South Pearl Street, Spiceland, Indiana 47385
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