IAGenWeb Project - Clayton co.


Delos J. Crain


D.J. Crain and wife
The residence

Delos J. Crain is one of the most progressive farmers of the younger generation in his native township and is a popular factor in community affairs, influential in connection with public interests and loyal in his support of those things that tend to advance the general welfare. He is the owner of one of the fine landed estates of Sperry township and it is specially interesting to record that on this homestead he has lived from the time of his birth, which here occurred on the 31st of July, 1879.

He is a son of James and Jane (Broker) Crain, both of whom passed the closing years of their lives in Volga. James Crain was born in England, where he was reared to 15 years of age, and he came to the United States in the year 1852. He first located at Lockport, New York, and in 1854 he came to Iowa and numbered himself among the pioneers of Clayton county. He settled on a tract of wild land now included in the well improved farm of the subject of this sketch, and his ability and well ordered enterprise as a farmer enabled him to accumulate a large landed property and to gain substantial success as an exponent of farm industry. He was thrice married, and the two daughters of his first marriage are now married and reside in the village of Volga, this county. Of the two children of the second marriage the elder was William, who died when seven months of age; and the younger is Delos J., to whom this sketch is dedicated.

The mother of Delos J. Crain was born February 14, 1853, and reared in the State of New York and came to Clayton county in her youth, her marriage to James Crain having here been solemnized and she having been 52 years old at the time of her death, August 25, 1905. Both she and her husband were earnest members of the Methodist Episcopal church and they so lived as to merit and receive the high regard of those with whom they came in contact in the various relations of life.

Delos J. Crain continued his studies in the public schools until he had attended the high school at Volga for one year, and thereafter he was a student during one term in the business college at Fayette, this state. He assisted his father in the affairs and work of the home farm until he had attained to his legal majority, and he then rented the old homestead, on which he continued his farming operations under these conditions for a period of five years. He then became the owner of the valuable property which comprises two hundred and ten acres of as fine land as is to be found in Clayton county, the farm being situated in sections 1 and 11, Sperry township, and which was part of his father's estate. Here he carries on general farming, and also gives considerable attention to the breeding and raising of Shetland ponies, and the modern house that Mr. Crain has erected on the place being looked upon as one of the finest rural domiciles in this township, even as its hospitality has caused it to become a center of much of the representative social life of the community.

Mr. Crain is aligned as a stalwart supporter of the cause of the Republican party, and the year 1916 finds him serving with characteristic loyalty and efficiency as township trustee and as president of the school board of his district. He is affiliated with lodge No. 72, Ancient Free and Accepted Masons, in Elkader, and there he and his wife are zealous and valued members of the Methodist Episcopal church, he being a member of its board of trustees.

On the 25th of September, 1900, was solemnized the marriage of Mr. Crain to Miss Ethel Smith, who was born in Delaware county, this state, and who is a daughter of William B. and Orril (Cowles) Smith, the former a native of Ontario, Canada, and the latter of the State of Massachusetts. Mr. and Mrs. Smith were pioneer settlers of Iowa and continued to reside in this state until their death, all save one of their seven children still surviving them.

Mr. and Mrs. Crain have four children, whose names and respective dates of birth are here noted : Cecil Orril, July 23, 1902; Erma E., April 24, 1904; Mildred Ruth, August 8, 1906; and William B. Smith Crain, May 25, 1908.

source: History of Clayton County, Iowa; From The Earliest Historical Times Down to the Present; by Realto E. Price, Vol. II, 1916; pg. 75-76

-OCR scanned by S. Ferrall

 

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