This page was last
updated on
Fayette County, Iowa
History Directory
Past and Present of Fayette County Iowa, 1910
Author: G. Blessin
B. F. Bowen & Company, Indianapolis, Indiana
Vol. I, Biographical Sketches
~Page 1044~
James E. Jennings Zachariah Jennings
In the
villages of the middle West are found men who were born on the farm, who
went through hard times and struggles in early life, who by dint of hard
work and good management won first a living, then a competency, from the
soil, and now have settled in the village, enjoying the fruits of their
labor, active in all the interests of the neighborhood, -- men whom it is
a pleasure to meet and to talk with, veritable mainstays of the community.
James E. Jennings, better known as "Ed," was born February
7, 1850, near Delhigh, Clayton county, Iowa, the son of Zachariah (known
as "Uncle Zack") and Mary (Morris) Jennings. The Jennings family are of
English descent. Zachariah as a boy went from Pennsylvania to Illinois
with his father, who took up land there and then went back east after his
family. Zachariah’s parents died in Illinois. They were the parents of
five children. Zachariah married in Warren county, Illinois. The Morrises
were of Welsh descent, but his wife’s mother was a German and was a woman
of great natural ability as a doctor and used to ride over the country and
treat the sick very successfully. She was the mother of thirteen children
and raised several besides. Zachariah Jennings started in a
small way by farming near Mineral Point and working in the mines. In 1848
or ’49 he went to Clayton county, Iowa, entered a claim, partly prairie
land, and started to make a home, building a log house and making other
improvements. He lost this claim and in 1853 came to this county, settling
in Illyria township on the river near Fry bridge. He first worked in the
Roll Mitchell saw-mill, then pre-empted a one hundred and twenty-acre
claim, erected a log house, and went to Elkader to work in a grist-mill to
get money to pay on his land. He found that another man was trying to beat
him out of the land, so he walked from his home to the land office at
Dubuque, starting from his home a one o’clock Sunday and reaching Dubuque
by eight o’clock Monday ahead of his rival, who had driven through. He
cleared and improved the land and lived on this farm until his death,
April 4, 1908. His wife died September 21, 1901. She was a very active
worker in the United Brethren church and was the first person baptized in
Volga river. Besides being an excellent wife and mother, she had inherited
her mother’s ability as a doctor and made many remarkable cures in the
country about. Zachariah Jennings was a man very well known and very much
esteemed in the county. During the later part of their lives both he and
his wife were cripples, the result of a sad accident when, returning from
a visit, their team carried them over a forty-two-foot embankment. They
were the parents of ten children, namely: John A., a farmer of Sumner,
Nebraska, who married a Mrs. Wheeler; Jane, who married Henry Gage, a
farmer and photographer, living near Spokane, Washington; Joseph, of Volga
City, Iowa, a farmer and minister in the United Brethren church, who
married Eleanor Crane; she died in June, 1908; Alonzo died at the age of
three years; David, of Alberta, Washington, a blacksmith, married Emma
Kaufman; J.E., the subject of this sketch; Sarah, who was a teacher in
this and Clayton counties and married Alonzo Fitzgibbons, of Clayton
county; Mary married Wallace Crandall, of Illyria township; William died
at the age of nineteen; George, a farmer in Illyria township, married Ella
Walters.
|