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Lewis M. Burch
Lewis M. Burch, one of the pioneer settlers of the
county, now residing in Pleasant Valley Township, is a native of
Greene County, Ind. He was born July 21, 1830, and with his
parents removed to Marshall County, Ill., in 1848. Three years
later, having attained his majority, he came to Fayette County,
Iowa, and located on land now owned by G. A. Oelwein, a part of
which is comprised within the corporate limits of the city
bearing the owner's name.
Mr. Burch was three times married. His first wife was Miss
Louisa Beasley, whom he wedded October 16, 1851, and who died in
March, 1855, leaving two children, a son and daughter, namely:
Sarah E., who was born January 27, 1853, and is now the wife of
Hiram Miller of Brainard, Iowa; and George W., who was born June
4, 1854, and was killed by lightning April 12, 1872, when
eighteen years of age. Mr. Burch's second marriage was
celebrated in West Union, in 1856, when he led to the marriage
altar Mrs. Catharine Butler, widow of Jacob Butler, and a
daughter of Joseph and Louisa Johnson. She was born in Lawrence
County, Ill., and had two children by her former marriage, sons:
Joseph Butler, who married Adelina Meikle and resides in
Oelwein; and Harrison, who wedded Mary Meikle, and is a farmer
of Jefferson Township. Mrs. Burch was the mother of one son and
three daughters by her second marriage - Arvilla J., born
October 20, 1857, is now the wife of A. J. Anders, a practicing
attorney of Oelwein, whose sketch is given elsewhere in this
volume; James A., born May 5, 1859, married Rena Mitchell, and
is engaged in farming in Jefferson Township; Mary Ellen, born
September 12, 1860, died at the age of one year; and Julia A.,
born August 23, 1863, is the wife of William Anders of Oelwein.
Mrs. Burch died in May, 1872, and was buried in the cemetery
laid out by her father-in-law. On the 10th of November, 1873, in
Fayette County, Mr. Burch was joined in wedlock with Miss
Floretta Miller, who was born in Monroe, Green County, Wis., and
is a daughter of Hiram and Martha Miller. Four children were
born of the latter marriage, one son and three daughters- Lewis
L., born October 17, 1874; Martha L., born March 21, 1876;
Katie, born August 10, 1877; and Lorena, born April 19, 1882.
Mr. Burch continued farming in Jefferson Township
until the fall of 1888, when he removed to Pleasant Valley Township of the
same county, where he is still engaged in agricultural pursuits. He is a
Democrat in politics and served as the first constable of Jefferson
Township, and also held other local offices while there residing. He is a
member of the Baptist Church as was his second wife. He is said to have been
the first permanent white settler in Jefferson Township, and after the
advent of his father and his large family the settlement they made was known
as the Burch Settlement. Mr. Burch is one of the oldest survivors of the
early pioneers of Fayette County. He has always been known as an upright,
honorable man, generous and confiding in disposition and still maintains
that cordial, open-hearted hospitality that characterized the settlers of
the western frontier.
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