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1462~
Mrs.
Annis Davis
The estimable lady whose name
introduces this sketch is a favorite with a wide circle of friends in
Fayette county, being a woman of high ideals and correct principles, and a
representative of one of the best old families of the county, also the
widow of a well remembered and highly honored citizen of Bethel township,
the late Lewis H. Davis. She was born in January 1851, in Fremont county,
Ohio, and is the daughter of Joseph and Annie (Glick) Morse, the father a
sterling New Englander, having been born in Vermont, March 14, 1802.
Emigrating west, he located in Fairfield county, Ohio, and there he
married Annie Glick, a native of that county. In 1852 the parents of Mrs.
Davis moved to Winneshiek county, Iowa, being among the pioneers of that
locality. The country was wild and wolves were frequently seen, and an
occasional lynx added its quota of danger to the hardships of life in a
new country. Mr. Morse followed farming there for many years and on the
old homestead in Winneshiek county the subject grew to womanhood. She
assisted with the manifold duties about the home and attended the
neighboring schools during her girlhood days.
On November 1, 1875, Miss Morse and Lewis H. Davis were married. He was
then a resident of West Union, but was born in Shelby county, Ohio, in
1839. He was the son of Cornelius and Matilda (Farrow) Davis. His
ancestors came from Virginia to Ohio in an early day and there Lewis H.
spent his childhood. In the early fifties he came with his parents to
Fayette county, Iowa, and grew to manhood on the home farm a mile east of
West Union. He attended the early schools, and his first marriage was to
Minerva Van Dorn, whose parents lived near West Union. Two children were
born to them, Lydia and Florence Davis; the former married H. L. McCubbin
and lives at Reno, Nevada; the latter married E. S. Butz and lives in
South Adelaide, Australia. The mother of these children dying, Mr. Davis
subsequently led to the hymeneal alter Annis Morse, as above noted.
Mr. and Mrs. Davis continued to reside on his farm of sixty acres near
West Union about fourteen years. This place was sold about 1889 and they
moved three and one-half miles southeast of Fayette where Mr. Davis
purchased a farm of one hundred and sixty acres, and there they continued
to reside for a period of fourteen years, developing a fine farm and
laying by a competency through good management and hard work. They then
moved into a neat and comfortable dwelling in Auburn, but retained the
farm. While living in the town of Auburn, Mr. Davis was called to his
reward on September 9, 1906.
Mr. and Mrs. Davis were the parents of two children, Clarence C. and
Alice. The daughter went to Lemore county, California, where he
half-sister, Mrs. Lydia McCubbin, then resided, and there her death
occurred in 1909, at the age of twenty-one years; she was a young lady of
much promise.
After the death of Lewis H. Davis, Mrs. Davis and her son, Clarence C., a
young man of excellent business qualifications, made their homes with
Peter Snyder, whose sketch appears on another page of this work, and the
three have had their home together ever since. For about four years the
two families had their joint home near Arlington. In September, 1909, when
Mr. Snyder bought a farm in the southeast quarter of section 35, Bethel
township, they all moved there, and have continued to make this attractive
vicinity their home.
~transcribed the Fayette Co IAGenWeb Project by Doris A.
Smith
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