HARRY H. NEWELL
Harry H. Newell,
who has won a gratifying measure of prosperity as a raiser and feeder
of stock, is the owner of a well improved farm of eighty acres in
Marion township. He was born in Muskingum county, Ohio, October 27,
1877, his parents being James and Clara (Dailey) Newell, who are
likewise
natives of the Buckeye state. Both the father and mother are still
living. They reared a family of four children, two sons and two
daughters, all of whom make their home in Iowa. The sons are married
and reside on farms in this county.
In his youthful
years Harry H. Newell received the educational advantages afforded by
the common schools. After attaining his majority he left the parental
roof and during the following six years was actively identified with
agricultural interests as a farm hand and also as a renter. He was
then married and subsequently purchased the farm of eighty acres which
he now owns and operates, having made all of the improvements on the
property. He feeds stock on quite an extensive scale and thus utilizes
all of the grain which he raises. In addition to the above he is now
doing quite an
extensive dairy business. His estimable wife has proven herself a true
helpmate as well as companion and to her he largely attributes his
success.
It was on the
28th of October, 1904, that Mr. Newell was joined in wedlock to Miss
Sarah Hickman, of Linn county, a daughter of Shelton and Chloe (Ross)
Hickman. She was one of a family of two sons and four daughters, the
others being as follows: Anna, the wife of W. J. Greer, of Marion,
Linn county John M., who is deceased; Mrs. Carrie B. Cowan, who lives
at Lake Park, Iowa; Marcus S., whose sketch appears on another page of
this work; and Laura, the wife of E. J. Gillmore, of Marion township.
Mrs. Newell supplemented her preliminary education by a course of
study in the high school. Both she and her husband are faithful
members of the Methodist church, the teachings of which they exemplify
in their daily lives. The young couple have an extensive circle of
warm friends throughout the community and wherever known they are held
in high esteem.
Source: 1911 Linn Co., IA History
Vol. 2 pg. 85
Submitted by Becky Teubner
HAMILTON D.NEWLAND
Hamilton D. Newland, a prosperous and highly respected resident of
Linn county, has made his home at Center Point since 1893 and is
living practically retired save for the supervision which he gives to
his extensive landed interests. His birth occurred in Raymond, Union
county, Ohio, on the 7th of September, 1841, his parents being Andrew
A. and Sarah A. (Argo) Newland, who were natives of Montgomery county,
Virginia, and Washington county, Pennsylvania, respectively. Their
marriage was celebrated in the latter county, the father having
removed to Pennsylvania in early manhood. About a year later they
journeyed westward to Ohio, locating in Union county, where Andrew A.
Newland worked as a brick and stone mason. By dint of untiring
industry he accumulated capital sufficient to enable him to purchase a
farm and carried on general agricultural pursuits in addition to
working at his trade until about 1875. In that year he came to Iowa,
purchasing a farm two and a half miles southwest of Center Point, on
which he made his home for about three years. The remainder of his
life was spent at Center Point but he passed away while on a visit in
Algona on the 20th of February, 1897, at the age of ninety-two years,
five months and twenty days. The demise of his wife occurred at Center
Point on the 27th of June, 1888, when she had attained the age of
seventy-six years, seven months and twenty-four days. George W.
Newland, a brother of Hamilton D., came to Center Point in November,
1856. He remained at his old home in Union county, Ohio, until the day
after casting his vote for John C. Fremont, the first presidential
candidate of the republican party, and then started westward, Center
Point, Iowa, being his destination. Here he made his home until his
death, which occurred February 7, 1893.
Hamilton D. Newland was reared at home
and began his education in the public schools, while subsequently he
entered Hillsdale (Mich.) College. He was a student at that
institution at the time of the outbreak of the Civil war and left
college in order to enlist for service. A company was enlisted from
the college class but the president of the school, who was the
lieutenant governor of the state, used his influence to prevent the
acceptance of the company by the state. Being thus thwarted in their
plans, the students became discouraged, disbanded and separated and
returned to their respective homes. Mr. Newland arrived home on the
5th of June, 1861, end joined Company F, Twenty-third Ohio Infantry,
the famous regiment to which McKinley and Hayes belonged, he remained
with that command for tree years and participated in all the
engagements of the regiment, being never absent except during the
thirty days when he was sent home on recruiting service. He was
fortunate in that he was never wounded even in the slightest degree,
and when his term of enlistment had expired he was mustered out as
sergeant of his company on the 7th of July, 1864, at Columbus, Ohio.
Returning home with a most creditable
military record, Mr. Newland then became identified with educational
interests, following the profession of teaching in Ohio for two years.
In the fall of 1866 he came to Iowa, locating in Center Point, where
he was offered and accepted the principalship of the schools. After
serving in that capacity for two years he turned his attention to
general agricultural pursuits, purchasing a farm south of Center
Point. Throughout the next quarter of a century his time and energies
were largely given to farming interests and he acquired more than five
hundred acres of valuable land. During this period he likewise
operated in real estate to some extent and thus came into possession
of a hotel and a general store at Center Point, both of which he
conducted at different times for a brief period. For the past
seventeen years he has made his home in Center Point, from which point
he looks after his extensive landed interests. In addition to his farm
lands he owns five pieces of town property as well as his home. A man
of excellent business ability, keen discrimination and sound judgment,
he has met with success in all of his undertakings and has long been
numbered among the most substantial and respected citizens of the
county.
On the 12th of December, 1867, Mr.
Newland was united in marriage to Miss Melinda J. Newman, a native of
Linn county and a daughter of John Nelson Newman, who was born in
Kentucky and came to this county from Illinois in the early ‘50s. Unto
Mr. and Mrs. Newland were born seven children, six of whom still
survive. Mark A., who graduated from the Center Point high school with
the class of 1889, is now engaged in the practice of medicine at that
place. Zell, who completed her studies in the Center Point high school
in 1890, is now the wife of C. C. Lewis, of Kenwood Park. John Fay
follows farming in Washington township, this county. The three
remaining children, all of whom are at home, are as follows: Evelyn,
who graduated from the Center Point high school with the class of
1901; George 0., who completed his studies in that institution in
1910; and Don H.
In politics Mr. Newland has always been
an unfaltering republican. He is a demitted member of the Masonic
fraternity, belongs to the Iowa Legion of Honor and has held all of
the offices in Denison Post, No. 244, G. A. R. At the state encampment
which was held in Cedar Rapids in 1903 he was elected senior vice
commander for the Department of Iowa. his wife is a devoted and
consistent member of the Christian church. A good citizen, a loyal
friend and a man who knows how to attain that for which he seeks, Mr.
Newland enjoys the esteem of all who have come into relation with him.
Source:
History of Linn County Iowa, From Its Earliest Settlement to the
Present Time, Vol. II, Chicago, The Pioneer Publishing Company,
1911, p. 42-3.
Contributed by:
Terry Carlson
JOSEPH NICODEMUS
For almost thirty
years this gentleman was prominently identified with the industrial
interests of Marion, Iowa, and as a blacksmith met with good success
in business, accumulating a comfortable competence which now enables
him to spend his declining years in retirement from active labor. He
was born in Bedford county, Pennsylvania, on the 1st of
March, 1838, a son of Joseph and Rebecca (Miller) Nicodemus, who spent
their entire lives in that county. In early manhood the father
followed the carpenter’s trade, and later engaged in farming. In
religious belief both he and his wife were Lutherans, and were people
of the highest respectability. Their family numbered eight children,
namely: Charlotte, now the widow of John W. Hull and a resident of
Bedford county, Pennsylvania; Catherine, who married David Blackburn
and died in October 1899; Tena, who died unmarried; Susanna, a
resident of Marion, Iowa, and widow of Benjamin Trott, who died in the
Civil war; Rebecca, who married John Adams and both are now deceased;
Maria, widow of Abraham Miller and a resident of Bedford county,
Pennsylvania; John, who died at the age of eighteen years; and Joseph,
of this review.
During his boyhood
Joseph Nicodemus had very little opportunity to attend school, as he
had to work hard. He remained under the parental roof until he
attained his majority, and then learned the blacksmith’s trade, to
which he devoted his energies throughout the remainder of his active
business life. His labors were interrupted, however, by his service
in the war of the Rebellion. In the fall of 1863 he enlisted as a
private in Company I, One Hundred and Forty-ninth Pennsylvania
Volunteer Infantry, known as the Bucktail regiment, under command of
Colonel White. He went first to Chambersburg and later to Carlisle,
Pennsylvania, and from there to Virginia. He took part in several
battles and skirmishes, including the engagements at Culpeper and
Brandy Station, and was honorably discharged when his term of
enlistment expired in 1864.
On the 19th
of February, 1863, Mr. Nicodemus was married, in Bedford county,
Pennsylvania, to Miss Catherine Elizabeth Nipple, of that county, of
which her parents, John and Elizabeth Nipple, were also natives. The
father was a miller by trade, and he and his wife always made their
home in Bedford county. Their children were Catherine Elizabeth,
Jacob, Amanda, David, Charlotte M., Ida Belle, and one who died in
infancy.
In the fall of 1864
Mr. and Mrs. Nicodemus came to Linn county, Iowa, and took up their
residence in Marion, where he purchased a small shop standing on the
site of his present shop, and at once commenced work at his trade. He
also bought real estate and erected several houses, building his own
home. He still owns his blacksmith shop, but has rented the same
since 1893, while he now lives retired. In connection with general
blacksmithing he also engaged in manufacturing wagons, buggies, etc.,
and was fairly successful in all his undertakings. His prosperity has
come to him through his own industry, perseverance and determination
to succeed, and by his upright, honorable course of life he has also
gained the confidence and good will of all with whom he has been
brought in contact. He is an active worker and consistent member of
the Methodist Episcopal church, and is also prominently connected with
Robert Mitchell Post, No. 206, G. A. R., of Marion. Since attaining
his majority he has always been a stanch Republican.
Source:
The Biographical Record of Linn County Iowa, Illustrated, Chicago:
The S. J. Clarke Publishing Company, 1901, pages 73-4.
Submitted by:
Carrie J. Robertson of Marion
HENRY JOHN NIETERT
The prosperity of any community, town or city depends upon its
commercial activity, its industrial and financial interests and its
trade relations and, therefore, the real upholders of a town are those
who stand at the head of its leading enterprises. Mr. Nietert is well
known throughout Linn county as president of the Exchange State Bank
of Walker and he is also prominently identified with various other
enterprises, which have proved of material benefit to the community.
He was born in Dayton, Ohio, March 12,
1848, a son of John II. and Caroline B. (Buhlman) Nietert, both
natives of Germany. The mother was only nine years of age when she
came to this country and the father was fifteen years old when he
crossed the Atlantic. Having relatives living in Ohio, he settled in
that state, where he served an apprenticeship to the cabinet-maker’s
and carpenter’s trades, while later he also learned the millwright’s
trade, in all of which he became very proficient. He was married in
Dayton and subsequently located at Tippecanoe, Ohio, but in 1854 came
west with his family, taking up his abode in Clayton, Clayton county,
Iowa, where he engaged in the grain and produce business for about
three years. At the end of that time he removed to Garnavillo, Iowa,
where he conducted a hotel for a number of years. In 1860, in company
with four other men, he took a stamp mill overland to Pikes Peak,
where they installed the same, but late that fall he sold out and
returned to Clayton county, Iowa, buying a small farm, which he
operated for a time. In 1864 he removed to Delaware county, Iowa, and
continued to engage in agricultural pursuits until coming to Walker,
Linn county, in 1875. For three years after his arrival here he gave
his attention to the agricultural implement business and in 1879 was
appointed postmaster of Walker, filling that position up to the time
of his death, which occurred in December, 1882. The mother of our
subject had passed away some years previous, dying in August, 1863.
Both were active members of the Lutheran Reformed church in early life
but subsequently united with the Methodist Episcopal church. The
father was also connected with the Masonic fraternity and was one of
the influential and prominent men of his community.
Under the parental roof Henry J. Nietert
remained during his minority and his early education was acquired in
the common schools. As a young man he worked for some years at farm
labor, following which he accepted a clerical position and served in
that capacity for various mercantile houses for a number of years. In
1873 he embarked in merchandising on his own account in Delaware
Center in partnership with J. Deily and there carried on business for
a year and a half, after which he removed to Earlville, the same
county. Six months later, however, he sold out and for three years
engaged in clerking for others. In 1878 he formed a co-partnership
with J. H. Gitchell and engaged in merchandising in Walker. In 1885 he
opened the Exchange Bank at this place, which he carried on as a
private banking institution until March, 1907, when it was
incorporated as the Exchange State Bank, Mr. Nietert becoming
president of the new institution. It is now in a flourishing condition
and is regarded as one of the safest financial concerns of this
section of the state. In 1881, in partnership with Mr. Gitchell, he
purchased the Walker Creamery and three years later built a branch
creamery at Center Point, operating both plants up to 1887, when Mr.
Gitchell took the latter and Mr. Nietert the Walker Creamery, of which
he has since been sole proprietor. In his business relations he has
always been found prompt and reliable and has thus gained the
confidence and esteem of all with whom he has had any dealings. His
financial interests have been ably managed and he now occupies a very
prominent and enviable position in business circles.
In 1881 Mr. Nietert was united in
marriage to Miss Anna E. Wilde, of Spring Grove township, Linn county,
and they have become the parents of two children, Roscoe H. and
Gertrude E., both at home. Politically Mr. Nietert is a stalwart
republican and he has been called upon to serve in several important
official positions, being mayor of Walker at different times. From
1894 until 1900 he was a member of the state legislature from this
district, serving in the twenty-fifth, twenty-sixth and twenty-seventh
general assemblies with credit to himself and to the entire
satisfaction of his constituents. He is a very public-spirited and
progressive man and his support can always be counted upon to further
those measures which he believes will prove of public benefit.
Fraternally he is an honored member of the Masonic order, belonging to
Robert Morris Lodge, No. 500. A. F. & A. M.; Trowel Chapter, No. 49,
R. A. M. Apollo Commandery, No. 26, K. T.; Iowa Consistory, No. 2, A.
& A. S. R.; and El Kahir Temple, A. A. 0. N. M. S., of Cedar Rapids.
He also belongs to Cedar Rapids Lodge, No. 251, B. P. 0. E., and
Walker Lodge, No. 498, I. 0. 0. F. In religious faith he and his wife
are Methodists and the family is one of prominence in the community
where they reside.
Source:
History of Linn County Iowa, From Its Earliest Settlement to the
Present Time, Vol. II, Chicago, The Pioneer Publishing Company,
1911, p. 20-21.
Contributed by:
Terry Carlson
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