Hartley, Thomas
1880 Federal Census Montrose, Iowa
Thomas Hartley
52
Occupation:
Steam engineer
Born: England April 12,
1828
Wife: Anna 43
Died Sept. 12, 1900
Portrait and Biographical Album of Lee County,
Iowa”, Chicago, Chapman Brothers, 1887, Page 356:
THOMAS HARTLEY,
of Montrose Township, is head engineer of the Government Guard, or Upper Lock,
on the Des Moines Rapids Government Canal, a position requiring the exercise of
large experience and a cool head. Mr. Hartley is considered peculiarly well
qualified for this responsible position. The subject of this biography is the
son of George and Elizabeth (Moat) Hartley, natives of Yorkshire, England, where
they were married. They came to America in 1833, proceeding at once to
Wheeling, W. Va., where the mother died three years later, in 1836. George
Hartley was a brewer by occupation, and survived his wife thirty-two years,
dying in 1868. They were the parents of eight children—Charles, William, Ann,
Moses, Thomas, John, George and Henry.
Thomas Hartley is
the fifth child of his parents’ family, and was born April 12, 1828. He
remained under the parental roof until he arrived at years of manhood, and was
united in marriage with Miss Ann Goss. Mrs. Hartley was born in 1836. Of their
union has been born one child, Charles, who married Miss Mary Mathena, , and is
now engaged as a machinist in Burlington, Iowa.
Thomas Hartley came
to the Hawkeye State in 1854 and located in Keokuk. He had learned the trade of
machinist and also that of engineering, in Wheeling, W. Va., in 1847. He took
charge of the Upper Lock as head engineer in 1879, and since that time has thus
been continuously engaged. He occupies a comfortable homestead and enjoys the
esteem of his fellow townsmen. In Politics he affiliates with the Republican
party.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Hilton, George
George Hilton
46
Occupation:
boat engineer
Born: Pennsylvania
Wife: Rebecca 33
Children: Arvilla 15,
Hattie 12, Hita 7, Danial 7, William 2
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Lewis, Marcina
1880 Federal Census
Marcina
55
Occupation:
steam engineer
Born: N. Y.
Wife: Lucy 53
Children: Carrie 19
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Added
McBride, Steve
Chapter 13
C.H. Thomas
Saturday Burlington Post
Out here, among the corn fields of Iowa, I discovered, two old time river men,
Steve McBride, formerly of Montrose.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Morris, W. J.
1880 Federal Census
W. J. Morris
55
Occupation:
Steam engineer
Born: New York
Wife: Elizabeth 49
Children: , Norwood 22,
Minnie 19
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Capts. Owen
Owen, Robert
pilot (1889 Lee County Directory)
Raft Pilot since 1852,
married Elizabeth A. Peck in 1856
“A Raft Pilots Log”
Walter Blair
List of Raft-boats, their Masters and owners, 1883
The “Prescott”
owned by Sam Speake and R. S. Owen,
Montrose, Iowa
Pg 299
List of Raft-boats in Commission, 1890,
with names of their Masters and Owners,
as published in the Davenport
Democrat, February, 1890
Prescott...............................................R.S.Owen
owned by Des Moines Towing Company of Montrose, Iowa.
1880 Federal Census
R. S. Owen
54
Occupation:
river pilot
Born: Indiana
Wife: Eliz 44
Children: Zack 22
From “Portrait and Biographical Album of Lee
County, Iowa” 1887, Pages 428 and 431.
[page 429 is blank and page 430 is a
picture of St. Mary’s Church and School, Ft. Madison, Iowa]
“CAPT. ROBERT S. OWEN is one of the pioneer
boatmen of the Mississippi, having plied the rapids between Keokuk and Montrose
for the last thirty-nine years, and is part owner of the steamboat “Park Bluff,”
belonging to the Des Moines Rapids Towing Company, and the steamer “Prescott.”
He also has an interest in other river craft, and among the members of his
calling occupies a prominent and enviable position. He is skillful and popular,
and is well and favorably known for miles up and down the river.”
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Owen, Ephraim/ Owen Ephriam
F.
From “Portrait and Biographical Album of Lee County, Iowa” 1887, Pages 428 and
431:
[page 429 is blank and page 430 is a picture of St. Mary’s Church and School,
Ft. Madison, Iowa]
“Ephraim F., also a steamboat Captain and pilot on
the lower Mississippi, was married in 1867, to Miss Mary Barnett, of Mobile,
Ala.; he died in St. Louis on the 18th day of September, 1867, of
yellow fever. He had started from St. Louis in command of the steamer “Bee,”
belonging to the Mississippi Valley Transportation Company, made his trip in
safety, and was stricken with the plague in Baton Rouge, La., and brought to St.
Louis. His first trip up the river as pilot was to St. Paul in 1854, and he
followed the Upper Mississippi as pilot until 1863, when he went below and
followed the Lower Mississippi trade for the following two years, then purchased
an interest in the steamer “War Eagle,” running her as Captain one year. He
then became employed by the above-named transportation company, and secured a
life insurance to the extent of $5,000, which after his death was paid to the
widow.”
Life Story of
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