James Varley
for over forty years was numbered among the honored
residents of Clayton County, and he was one of its early
settlers, his home being during his last few years in
Elkader, where his death occurred May 11, 1894. Always
active in all measures of public improvement and
educatonal affairs, he held the friendship and love of
all who knew him, and his death was thought to be a great
loss to the community in which he had so long and
honorably lived.
The birth of James Varley occurred near Wheeling, W.Va.,
May 6, 1816, and his father, William Varley, was a native
of Maryland. At a very early day he removed to the west,
making a settlement in Clayton County and building a
grist-mill in Boardman Grove, which mill was one of the
first erected in this region and to it the early settlers
came from far and near bring their corn and wheat to be
ground.
The boyhood of our subject was passed in West Virginia
and there he received his education. In 1850 he came to
this county and settled on land in Pony Hollow, where he
successfully conducted a large farm for nearly forty
years, becoming well-to-do, and then in March, 1888,
feeling that he deserved a rest from his persistent
labors, he retired from active cares and for the
remaining six years of his life made his home in Elkader.
In politics he voted with the Republican party, and
religiously he was a devoted member of the United
Brethren Church
October 28, 1869, our subject married Mrs. Antoinette
Shippy, a native of Chautauqua County, N.Y. She is a
daughter of William P. Bush, whose birth also occurred in
the Empire State, and her mother, formerly Rebecca
Hotchkiss, was born in Portland County of that state.
Mrs. Varley passed her girlhood and received her
education in the Empire State, where she married Zabin
Shippy. Of that union three children were born, Adell,
Adelbert and May. The family removed to Clinton County,
Iowa, about 1850 and here the death of Mr. Shippy
occurred in 1864. To Mr. and Mrs. Varley was born one
daughter, Lilly, who is now the wife of Elzie Cary, of
Estherville, this state. Mrs. Varley still continues to
make her home in Elkader and is interested in the work of
the Baptist church of this place, to which she belongs.
She is held in the highest esteem by those who have the
pleasure of her acquaintance as a lady of most excellent
and lovable qualities, whose heart is kind and open to
the poor and needy and who makes it her object in life to
smooth the pathway of her fellows in every possible
manner.
~source: Portrait and Biographical Record of Dubuque,
Jones and Clayton Counties; Chicago: Chapman Pub. Co.,
1894; pg 414
~transcribed by Sharyl Ferrall
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