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1907 Past and Present Biographies

John P. Hunt

John P. Hunt has traveled life’s journey for eighty-two years, his birth having occurred in Leeds county, Canada, on the 12th of October, 1825. He now owns and occupies a farm on section 29, Dawson township, Greene county, Iowa, having resided in the county for thirty-five years. His parents were John and Laura Hunt, whose family numbered eleven children.

John P. Hunt was reared to manhood in his native country and in the fall of 1849, when twenty-four years of age, became a resident of Waukegan, Lake county, Illinois, where he followed the blacksmith’s trade until 1872. He then came to Greene county, Iowa, locating in Hardin township, where he purchased eighty acres that had been partially improved and in addition to blacksmithing he now gave his attention to general farming, living upon his Hardin township property until the fall of 1882, when he sold out there and bought his present place of eighty acres in Dawson township. He personally operated this farm until the spring of 1907 and now rents it. He has always done blacksmithing and repair work for his neighbors, usually without taking any pay for it - a fact which indicates his kindliness of spirit and his readiness to do for others. That he has the good will and friendship of the entire community has been manifest in many ways, a notable example of which was that in the first fall the neighbors had a surprise party on him, a dozen of them driving into his yard one morning and husking his corn for him just to show their good will. Always pleasant, always courteous, always considerate of the rights of others, Mr. Hunt justly merits the regard in which he is uniformly held.

In 1850 was celebrated the marriage of Mr. Hunt and Miss Charlotte Bishop, with whom he traveled life’s journey for twelve years, when, in 1862, they were separated by the death of the wife. There were two children by that marriage: A. C., who is now living in Omaha; and John D., who resides in Cedar Rapids. In 1870 Mr. Hunt was again married, his second union being with Sarah Lyohs, who died in 1875, leaving three children: Mrs. Cora Smith, now a resident of California; Mrs. Jessie Coover, living in Dawson township; and Richard B., who follows farming in Dawson township. In 1878 Mr. Hunt wedded Elizabeth Kloss, a daughter of Jacob Kloss, who was born in Bavaria, Germany, in 1815 and died in Dawson township in 1885. His wife, who bore the maiden name of Rebecca Quigley, was born in Lehigh, Pennsylvania, in 1820, and is still living, making her home with Mr. and Mrs. Hunt. She is a remarkably well preserved woman for one of her years and yet does considerable housework. Mr. Kloss came to America when twenty-one years of age and for a long period followed mining in Pennsylvaia. In 1876 he arrived in Greene county, where he followed farming until his death. In his family were eleven children, of whom two died in infancy, while four are yet living: David, a resident of Pennsylvania; Mrs. Hunt; Philip, who is living in Churdan, Iowa; and Franklin, residing in Tennessee. One son of this family, William Kloss, was killed while serving as a defender of the Union cause in the Civil war. There have been two children born of the last marriage of Mr. Hunt: Mrs. Annie Burgess, the wife of Albert Burgess, who operates her father’s farm, he and his wife living at the old homestead; and Mrs. Mabel Brown, of Dawson township.

In politics Mr. Hunt has always been a stalwart republican but without aspiration for office. He is a member of the Friends church, while his wife holds membership in the Methodist Episcopal church and both are earnest Christian people, neglecting no duty or obligation to their fellowmen. Throughout his life Mr. Hunt has exemplified the truth of the Emersonian philosophy that “the way to win a friend is to be one” and there is no more popular or highly respected resident in Dawson township or in all Greene county than John P. Hunt.


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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