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1907 Past and Present Biographies

Horace Bennett

Horace Bennett, a well known agriculturist residing on section 22, Grant township, was born in Medina county, Ohio, December 3, 1844. He was a son of John and Mary Anne (Lonker) Bennett, both of Ohio. The mother came to Iowa with her second husband, Luson McClain, in 1854, and passed away in this state in 1874. She was the mother of seven children, four of whom are still living: Horace, the subject of this review; Catherine, a resident of Redcloud, Nebraska; Sophrona, of Canyon City, Colorado; and Lorinda, of Keokuk, Iowa.

Horace Bennett has had great difliculties to struggle against from the time that he was born. His father died when he was only one year old and at the age of three his mother bound him out to serve until he should reach the age of eighteen years. His foster father proved an exacting taskmaster and at eleven he felt that in some way he must break the legal ties which bound him, but he was not a lad who did anything hastily. He gave the matter full consideration and talked it over with his fellow associates, with whom he was very popular. In full sympathy with his desires, they raised a purse of five dollars that he might carry out his plans. He accordingly went to Rockford, Illinois, where he was employed until 1863, when he removed to Greene county, Iowa, where his mother had migrated a decade previous. It will be easier for us to appreciate the condition of the country through which he traveled at that time if we remember that the railroad only came to State Center. From that place Mr. Bennett went by stage over roads that were far from being what our automobiles travel over today. He arrived at Des Moines in due time and walked to his mother’s residence in Jackson township, Greene county. In the vicinity of her home he secured employment on a farm, but in the fall of 1864 returned to Illinois. At this time he enlisted in Company G, One Hundred and Fifty-third Illinois Volunteer Infantry, in which he served until the close of the war, doing mostly garrison duty.

When his country no longer needed his service he returned to Greene county, where he bought eighty acres of improved land on section 22, where he has since resided. By industrious habits and economical living he has been enabled to add to his possessions little by little until he now has accumulated enough to feel that at any time he may retire from active labors and enjoy the fruits of his long and industrious life.

Mr. Bennett has been twice married. His first wife, to whom he was married January 1, 1866, bore the maiden name of Emma Zetta Anderson and was a daughter of William Anderson, one of the very first pioneers of Greene county. After thirty years of happy married life, in which she always proved a faithful wife and loving mother, Mrs. Bennett passed away, leaving a devoted husband and ten children to mourn her loss. The children were: Minnie, the wife of Isaiah Hamilton, an agriculturist near Scranton; Theodore, an agriculturist of Greene county; Ralph, who also follows farming and lives in Grant township; Ida, living near Cooper; Jessie, of Jackson township; William, an agriculturist of Hardin township; Laura, a resident of Grant township; Anna, who is at home; Roscoe, who is associated with his father on the farm; and James Earl, who is at home. On March 16, 1904, Mr. Bennett was married to Fidella McConnell, a resident of Sibley, Iowa. This union has been blessed with one child, Horace Francis.

Horace Bennett has always been a staunch republican and though he has never been an office seeker he did at one time consent to serve as township trustee. He and his family have been members of the Methodist Episcopal church for a number of years and are influential in its work. He is a member of the Grand Army of the Republic at Jefferson and of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows of the same place. From his boyhood he has had to gain everything by his own initiative and though he has met many obstacles he has always overcome them and has thereby gained a staunch character, a ready habit of mind and a self-reliance which come only through the school of experience in which he has served. He has always been honest and upright in his dealings with his fellowmen and no one has ever sought his aid in vain. When he is fimlly mustered out of life’s army it can be truthfully said at the last grand review that he has fought a good fight.


Transcribed from "Past and Present of Greene County, Iowa Together With Biographical Sketches of Many of Its Prominent and Leading Citizens and Illustrious Dead,"
by E. B. Stillman assisted by an Advisory Board consisting of Paul E. Stillman, Gillum S. Toliver,
Benjamin F. Osborn, Mahlon Head, P. A. Smith and Lee B. Kinsey, Chicago: The S. J. Clarke Publishing Company, 1907.


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