Mayhew W. Eaton
Mayhew W. Eaton, one of the earliest residents of Allamakee
county and today one of the most successful business men of
Waukon, is extensively engaged in the buying, selling and
shipping of live stock. He is interested also in the grain
business and connected through investment with many of the most
important business and corporate interests of the city, his
activities forming valuable element in the general municipal
development. He has resided in Allamakee county since 1857 but
was born in Wisconsin, August 1, 1852. His parents were born in
Nova Scotia, where they grew to maturity. After their marriage
they came to the United States and about the year 1848 settled in
Wisconsin, where they resided for a number of years, removing
later to Illinois. In that state they made their home in De Kalb
county but later returned to Wisconsin, whence in 1857 they moved
to Allamakee county, Iowa. Mr. Eaton purchased land in Franklin
township and developed there an excellent farming property, upon
which he continued to reside until his death, which occurred when
he was eighty-three and a half years of age. He had survived his
wife a little over nine years.
Mayhew W. Eaton was a boy of five years when he came with his
parents to Allamakee county. He was reared upon his fathers
farm in Franklin township, acquiring his primary education in the
district schools and supplementing this by a three term course in
the Waukon high school. After he laid aside his books he engaged
in teaching during the winter terms, spending his summers working
upon the farm, but eventually he left Iowa and went to South
Dakota, where he took up a homestead claim of one hundred and
sixty acres. Upon that property he spent a part of one year and
then returned to Waukon, where he formed a partnership in the
conduct of a boot and shoe business. During the three years in
which he was interested in merchandising he engaged also in the
grain and stock business, owning an interest in a grain elevator.
He later formed a partnership with J. B. Jones, purchasing
elevator No. 1 in Waukon, of which the firm is still the
proprietor. Mr. Eaton, however, is not personally active in this
branch of the business, Mr. Jones supervising the conduct of the
elevator and the buying and selling of the grain. Mr. Eaton gives
all of his time to his extensive live-stock interests. He has by
his energy, industry and success made secure for himself a place
of prominence among men of marked ability in Waukon State Bank,
an institution with which he has been connected for an number of
years.
In 1879 Mr. Eaton married Miss Ella Minert, a native of Allamakee
county and a daughter of John Minert, a pioneer in the section.
He located in Post township in early times. Mr. and Mrs. Eaton
are the parents of seven children: Nellie, the wife of Ray
Slitor, who is connected with the Great Northern Railroad in St.
Paul, Minnesota; Dora, who is an accomplished vocalist and
teacher; Arthur J., who is practicing law in South Dakota and who
married Lisle Steward, daughter of Colonel A. G. Stewart; Guy W.,
also engaged in the practice of law in Waukon; Ruth, the wife of
Dennis Cota, proprietor of the Cota Theater of Waukon; and Lucile
and Marion, who are students in the Waukon high school.
Immediately after his marriage Mr. Eaton purchased a residence in
the southern part of the city and made his home there for
twenty-five years. At the end of that time he sold his property
and purchased Judge Grangers residence, which is one of the
most attractive in the city.
Politically Mr. Eaton gives his allegiance to the republican
party and has been affiliated with it since casting his first
vote. For a number of years he served as a member of the city
council and was for seven years mayor of Waukon. He served as
delegate to both state and county conventions and for ten
consecutive years was a member of the board of supervisors,
holding the record for length of continuous service in Allamakee
county, Fraternally he is connected with the Masonic order,
holding membership in the blue lodge, chapter and commandery, and
he has served in various important official capacities in the
blue lodge and chapter. Mrs. Eaton is a member of the Waukon
Methodist Episcopal church and active in church and Sunday school
work. A resident of Allamakee county since his childhood, Mr.
Eaton is well and favorable known in this part of Iowa, where his
business activity has effected general business growth and his
progressive spirit influenced political standards in an important
and beneficial way.
-source: Past & Present of Allamakee County; by
Ellery M. Hancock; S. J. Clarke Pub. Co.; 1913
-transcribed by Diana Diedrich
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