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Family History
Alexander-Frain-Graybill-Smith
ALEXANDER
Robert and Mary Jeanette Alexander left York County Pennsylvania and
came to Iowa in the 1870s. They bought a farm north of the blacksmith
shop in Grove Township where Norma Frain still lives. Mrs. John Frain
and Hollis have passed away, and Lawrence is in a nursing home in
Council Bluffs.
Robert and Mary Jeanette had five children; Mary
Elizabeth who married George Frain, William Alonzo who married Stella
Kennedy, Ella Belle who married John J. Kilgore, John who married Bell
Alexander, and Joseph who married Sarah Mercer.
Mary Elizabeth and George Frain were the parents of
Mattie, Viola, Nettie, Lydia, Henry, Elmer, Sylvester, John Arthur,
Clarence, Ernest, and Leona. Most of them lived in Pottawattamie Co.
all their lives.
John and Bell Alexander moved to Council Bluffs and
had
three sons; Alonzo, Alfred and James.
Ella and John [Jack] Kilgore were the parents of
Arthur,
Vesta Viola and Clyde who was killed in Argonne, France during WW I.
Two sons died at an early age, Ralph and Carl and are buried in the
Carson Cemetery.
Joseph and Sarah were the parents of Delpha,
Morris,
Vena, Jennie, and Verne Alexander. They moved to Adair and later to
Polk County.
Written and submitted by Gail Meyer Kilgore 2003.
FRAIN
George Frain walked from Fayette, New York to
Cedar County Iowa in 1837 to see if he would like living in Iowa. He
built a two room house, put in a crop amd walked back to New York after
his family. The next year they came to Iowa. About 1850 two of his
sons,
Peter and John, came to Pottawattamie county. John didn’t like it
but
Peter stayed working as a ferryboat captain, farming and working in a
mill.
Peter married Lydia Smith daughter of John Smith of
Grove Township. His sister Mary Catherine married Lydia’s brother
Stephen.
George and Mary
Frain |
The rivers and streams always seemed to go out of
their
banks with every heavy rain and anything in their path was washed away.
During one such time as the water started coming into the mill, Peter
lashed his wife and son to the upstairs steading of the mill so they
would not be thrown around if the mill went. Soon it was washed down
river where it lodged against some fallen trees. They spent the rest of
the night on the roof of the mill until they could see to climb down.
The next time Peter was not too fortunate. Lydia and the children were
taken to her folks but Peter stayed to move the flour to the upper room
and was expected to follow on horse when he had finished. However, the
sand bags did not hold and the mill was washed away. This time Peter
was drowned, October 12, 1861.
Peter and Lydia had four children George, Elizabeth
who
died when she was 16, Mary Frain Cavern who lived in Missouri and
Margaret [Mag] Price, who lived in Kansas.
George worked out among the farmers and hauling
grain
to and from the mill with an oxen team when he was quite young. His
favorite companion was his Uncle Steve, who taught him several trades
so he could always find work even though he was only a boy. He always
liked to tell his grandchildren that he once plowed up Macedonia. Old
Macedonia was west of the present town and he was hired to plow the sod
where the present town now is, walking behind an oxen team and sod
buster or walking plow.
On March 5, 1875 he married Mary Elizabeth
Alexander,
daughter of Robert and Mary Jeanette Alexander. Their children were
Masey Mabel [Mattie] who married Otto Roberson. Viola married Jacob
Houser. Lydia married Frank Flowers. Margaret Janet married Albion
Barr. Leone married Guy Armstrong. Oliver Allen died at am early age.
Henry married Myrtle Houser. Elmer married Alta Barker and lived in
Blair, Nebraska. Sylvester [Vess] married Helen King. John married
Hattie Bisbee. Arthur married Joy Swacker. Clarence married Olive
Freeman and in later years he married Gladys Campbell and lived in
Council Bluffs. Ernest married Bertha Swacker and lived in Lincoln,
Nebraska.
George and Mary Frain spent all their married life
in
Pottawattamie County except for one year when they tried living in
Kansas. The hot winds and rattle snakes they would see crawling under
the wall paper of the soddy or across the kitchen floor soon made them
hurry back to Iowa the next year.
John and Hattie Frain became the owners of the old
Home Place which
Lawrence and Hollis Frain farm. Children of John and Hattie are Neva
who married Lloyd Kuhr and lives near Blair, Nebraska; Gay who married
Eldon King and lives in Council Bluffs; Lawrence, Hollis and Norma
Frain. [The Frain family is originally from Chester Co., PA, DeFrain
was the surname in Chester Co.]
Written by Nova Kuhr. Submitted by:
Gail Meyer
Kilgore, Mar 2003
GRAYBILL
Arno Peter Graybill was a self-educated man and for
many years a telephone lineman and maintenance man for the Western
Telephone Co. in Carson, Iowa. He was also an efficient carpenter. Arno
was born near Wheeler Grove in Pottawattamie Co. on Nov. 3, 1883 and
died May 16, 1955. Arno's parents were John A. and Fannie [Green]
Graybill, both natives of Pottawattamie County. Arno was married to
Lula Grace Alley, who was born in Fremont County near Hillsdale, Iowa
on June 4, 1886 and died Jan. 19, 1964. Seven children were born to
this union: Ruth, Harold, Hope, Cloyd, Bea, Laura and Franklin. Ruth
Ora married Stephen Brubaker in 1929 and died at the age of 22 years at
the University Hospital in Iowa City, Iowa. She left a son Don LaRance,
who at the present time is a Principal in the Inter-City School in
DesMoines, Iowa. Harold Wayne has retired from the U.S. Air Force and
lives with his wife Lou in Colorado Springs, Colorado. Hope Vera is
married to Wayne F. Carr and lives in Carson, Iowa as do their two sons
Walter and Ken with their families. Cloyd LeRoy is also retired from
the U. S. Air Force and lives with his wife Irene in Mesa, Arizona.
Their son Robert is a student at the Illinois University. Bea Grace
died at the age of 16 months. Laura Lucile married Homer Good and lives
in Estes Park, Colorado, and they have three sons, William, Richard
andRandall. Franklin Arno lives with his wife Jeanne in Fort Collins,
Colorado. They have a son Daniel and a daughter Kathy. Franklin is a
professor at CSU in Fort Collins and has written several textbooks on
statistics. Mrs Lula Graybill was know around Carson for her kindness
and her neighbors and friends and was a hard working woman and a
wonderful mother. Mr. and Mrs. Graybill and their children are all
members of the Reorganized Latter Day Saints Church. Mrs. Graybill was
living in her home at 812 Lucust Street at the time of her death. It
had been the Graybill home for 52 years
John Arno Graybill, son of Levi and Patience
Graybill ,
was born August 4, 1854 near Wheeler Grove, east of Macedonia, Iowa. He
married Frances [Fannie] M. Green on Feb. 18, 1880 and to this union
was born ten children, five of whom died in infancy. The other five
children are: Arno Peter, Leslie Gould, Elba George, Vena Muriel and
Neva Wanda. John was a carpenter by trade and both he and Fannie were
affiliated with the Reorganized Church of the Latter Day Saints. Fannie
was born Aug. 4, 1861 in Fremont County, Iowa but lived in Carson, Iowa
until her death May 26, 1920. She and Levi are buried in the Old Morman
Cemetery, 3-1/2 miles east of Macedonia, Iowa.
Levi Graybill was born in Bloomfield Township,
Jackson
County, Ohio on March 12, 1818 and died Nov. 30, 1912. He married
Patience Smith on June 21, 1841 and they moved to Nauvoo, Illinois in
1845, from Nauvoo to Kanesville [now Council Bluffs, Iowa] in June
1846. In the spring of 1847 Levi discovered a stone and a fall of water
in the Nishna Botna River at Old Macedonia, Iowa and posted a
squatter's notice at the waterfall and cleared 80 acres of timber near
the river. Here he built the first log cabin one-half mile south of
main street in the present Macedonia, Iowa. He moved his family back to
live in the log cabin, later they moved to Wheeler Grove. Levi and
Patience had several children but only five grew to maturity.
Salathiel, Lafayette, David, John and Patience [Mrs. Sidney Pitt]. Levi
was a farmer and a self-sustained missionary for the early Latter Day
Saints and later was rebaptized into the Reorganized Latter Day Saints.
Patience was born Nov. 26, 1825 and died Aug. 14, 1895. Both Levi and
Patience are buried in the Old Morman Trail Cemetery,3-1/2 east of
Macedonia, Iowa.
Written by Neva Kuhn. Submitted by Gail
Meyer
Kilgore 2003.
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SMITH
Henry A. Smith, now living in the village of Macedonia, has for a long
period been connected with the farming and stock-raising interests of
the county and is now engaged to some extent in carpentering and
building. His birth occurred in this township, October 13, 1857, his
parents being Stephen and Mary (Frain) Smith, who are now residing in
Grove township, this county, where the father follows farming, to which
pursuit his entire life has been devoted. In their family were four
sons and a daughter: George M., who is now living practically retired
in Tabor, Iowa; Willard E., whose home is in Macedonia township; Clara
V., the wife of C. E. Bogue, of Glenwood Springs, Colorado; and Arthur
J., at home.
The other member of the family is Henry A. Smith, who was reared to the
occupation of farming and has always resided in this county. He was a
pupil in the public schools and when he had mastered the common
branches of English learning, he turned his attention to agriculture
pursuits as a life work. He has prospered in his undertakings, bringing
his fields under a high state of cultivation, and through his practical
and progressive methods of tilling the soil has secured good crops,
which have brought a very satisfactory price on the market. He is now
the owner of two excellent farms in Macedonia township, one comprising
one hundred and twenty acres of land and the other containing eighty
acres. He now leaves the active work of the farm to others, but still
gives personal supervision to his places. In 1901 he removed to the
village of Macedonia and erected a residence, which he has since
occupied. For five years he was engaged in the hardware business but
has now retired from commercial pursuits. He is, however, engaged to
some extent in carpentering and building and is thus identified with
the improvement of the town.
Mr. Smith was married, in Grove township, in 1883, to Miss Ella Travis,
a native of Jefferson county, Iowa, and unto them have been born three
children: Grace, Fae and Harry, all at home.
In his political views Mr. Smith is a republican and his fellow
townsmen, recognizing his worth and ability, have frequently called him
to position of political preferment, so that he has filled all the
township offices. He has been trustee, township clerk and in Grove
township now serving as a member of the council. His duties have been
discharged with promptness and fidelity and his worth as a
public-spirited citizen is widely acknowledged. He belongs to the
Masonic Lodge at Macedonia, and he and all his family are members of
the Christian church of Grove township. In the community they are much
esteemed and their circle of warm friends is an extensive one.
John Smith was born in Rowan County, North
Carolina around 1800. In March of 1822 he married Elizabeth Martha
Koonts or Koons. She was born in 1806 and was the daughter of George
Koonts and Mary Elisabeth Eller. In the fall of 1823 the family of
George Koonts and John Smith moved to Henry County, Indiana where John
worked as a road supervisor and farmer. Around 1837 or 38 they moved to
Adams County, Illinois. Children born to this family were Mary, who
married George Greybil [Graybill], Patience who married Levi Greybil
[Graybill], Hannah who married Perry Omen, James Saxton and George
Greybil, Elizabeth Martha who married John Winegar, Lydia married Peter
Frain, Nathan Sanford and John Sharpe. Stephen married Mary Catherine
Frain. Samuel Joseph married Rachel Yokum, two sons died in infancy.
After the death of his wife Elisabeth in Adams
County,
he married Sarah Winegar. Their children were Rhoda Ann, Hiram, Samuel
Carolos [Lot] and Abraham who married Olive Melissa Knopp. Several
children died in infancy.
In the fall of 1847 Stephen Smith helped some
friends
and relatives move to Council Bluffs and he stayed there through the
winter. Due to illness in the family and bad weather John Smith did not
come all the way until April of 1848. He built the first house in what
is now known as Macedonia Township and lived there six or seven years,
In 1853 or 4 he built a house in Grove Township. He build a saw mill on
Farm Creek and on Jordon Creek. Up until then the pioneers had been
making their houses of round logs. However, the elements were against
him and his saw mills were either washed away or damaged so badly he
gave it up and devoted his life to farming. We know that he had a kind
heart because when the Mormons were sick and starving out along the
Platte he and some of his sons took some grain to the mill to be ground
and took it to them so they could bake bread at least.
He served several terms as commissioner of his
township
and was a member of the County Board when the courthouse at Council
Bluffs was built.
John Smith helped organize the first Religious
Organization in Grove Township around 1863 and a church was built on
the road north of the McKenzie Blacksmith shop near the Lawrence and
Hollis Frain farm. Some of the first members were John Smith and wife
Sarah, E. W. Knopp and wife, A. J. Fields and wife Sarah, James Otte
and wife Mehitable, Levi Greybil [Graybill] and wife Patience, John
Winegar and wife Eizabeth, Joseph Smith and wife Rachel and Stephen
Smith. John Smith was president of the organization. John and Sarah and
many of their descendants wre buried in the Latter Day Saints Cemetery
in Grove Township.
Children of Stephen Smith and Mary Catherine Frain
were
Henry, George M., Mrs. Clara Bogue, Willard and Arthur.
Children of Peter Frain and Lydia Smith were
George,
Elisabeth, Mary and Margaret.
Stephen Smith, now living retired but still residing
on his farm on
section 27, Grove township, came to Pottawattamie county about the 1st
of November 1847. On this day he arrived in Council Bluffs, where he
spent the winter. In the following April his father arrived in
Macedonia township, bringing his family with him, and there he built
the first house within what is now the borders of the township. John
Smith, the father, resided there for eight years or more, and in the
fall of 1853 or 1854 became a resident of Grove township, settling on
section 8, where he continued to reside until his death occurred, in
1870, when he was seventy-two years of age. His remains were interred
in the cemetery of the Latter Day Saints in Grove township. He was a
farmer by occupation and at one time he built the first saw-mill on
Farm creek, which he operated for several years, thus becoming
associated with the industrial development as well as the agricultural
interests of the county. In politics he was originally a Whig, but upon
the dissolution of that party became a Republican. He served for
several terms as supervisor from his township and was a member of the
county board when the first courthouse at Council Bluffs was built. As
a determined pioneer and influential citizen he was well known in this
county. His birth had occurred in North Carolina and he had resided for
some time in Indiana prior to coming to Iowa. The wife, who bore the
maiden name of Elizabeth Martha Koonts, was born in Indiana, and from
that state they removed to Adams county, Illinois, where the death of
Mrs. Smith occurred, in 1840.
Stephen Smith was born in Henry county, Indiana, January 28, 1836. His
father wedded a second time, having wedded Miss Sarah Winegar in Adams
county, Illinois, after losing his first wife. She accompanied her
husband to Pottawattamie county and died here in 1882. By the two
marriages there were seven sons and six daughters. Those of the family
who came to Pottawattamie county were: Mary, Patience, Hannah,
Elizabeth, Lydia, Rhoda, Anna, Stephen, Joseph, Hiram, Carlos and
Abraham. Two brothers of the family died in early childhood. Of the
children Stephen, Lydia and Abraham are still living, the sister being
a resident of Cheyenne county Kansas, while the brother makes his home
in northwestern Nebraska.
Stephen Smith was eleven years of age when he came with his father to
Pottawattamie county. In Illinois he had attended subscription schools,
but owing to the fact that this county was a frontier district in which
the homes were widely scattered he had no educational advantages in
this locality. He has always followed farming as a life work. In early
days he underwent the hardships, privations and experiences incident to
pioneer life and performed the arduous task necessary to the
development of a new farm , but as the years passed he was very
successful and now is enabled to live retired in the enjoyment of all
of the comforts and some of the luxuries of life.
In Mills county, Iowa, Mr. Smith was married to Miss Mary C. Frain, who
was born May 31, 1837, and was brought to Iowa at an early period in
its development when about five years of age. The family home was
established in Cedar county, where both father and mother died. To her
husband she has been a faithful companion and helpmate on life's
journey and they have reared a family of five children: Henry A.,
living in Macedonia; George M., of Fremont county, Iowa; Mrs. Clara V.
Bogue, of Eagle county, Colorado; Willard E., a farmer of Macedonia
township; and Arthur J., at home.
Mr. Smith of this review was reared in the faith of the Church of the
Latter Day Saints, but is not connected therewith at the present time.
In politics he is an earnest Republican, having supported the party
since casting his first presidential vote for Abraham Lincoln. He has
served in various township offices and as township trustee altogether
for about seventeen years, a fact which indicates his fidelity to duty
and the confidence and trust reposed in him by his fellowmen. Wherever
known he is held in high esteem and his good qualities entitle him to
the record which is uniformly given him, while his close application
and industry in business have justly merited the success that has came
to him through his farming operations
Willard E. Smith, who is engaged in general agriculture pursuits on
section 27, Macedonia township, was born May 12, 1865, in Grove
township, this county, and is therefore a representative of one of its
old families, his parents, Stephen and Mary (Frain) Smith, being still
residents of Grove township. Their family numbered four sons and a
daughter: Henry, of Macedonia; George, of Tabor; Clara, the wife of
Charles Bogue, of Colorado; Willard E., of this review; and Arthur, at
home.
No event of special importance occurred to vary the routine of farm
life for Willard E. Smith in the days of his boyhood and youth. He
remained with his parents until he attained his majority, with the
exception of two years spent in Colorado and Montana -- 1884 and 1885.
He was engaged mining in the former state and was employed upon a ranch
in the latter. He then returned home, was married at the age of
twenty-one years and started out his life on his own account as a
farmer of Grove township. He first rented one hundred and sixty acres
of land, which he cultivated for three years, and on the expiration of
that period he bought a farm of one hundred and sixty acres in
Macedonia township, where he resided for three years. On selling that
property he made investment in two hundred and forty acres,
constituting the northwest quarter and the west half of the southwest
quarter of section 24, Grove township, which he now owns. In March,
1905, however, he bought his present farm and took up his abode upon
this place, comprising one hundred and eighty acres on sections 22 and
27, Macedonia township. He therefore has a total of four hundred and
twenty acres in the two farms and is cultivating both tracts, raising
grain and stock. He is a large stock feeder and shipper, and his
business is bringing to him a very gratifying financial return.
Pleasantly situated in his home life, Mr. Smith was married in 1887 to
Miss Susan Knox, who was born in Youngstown, Ohio, October 21, 1867,
and came here at the age of ten years with with her parents, Andrew and
Matilda (Young) Knox, natives of Ireland, who were married, however in
Massachusetts. The family home was established in Grove township when
Mr. Knox brought his wife and children to Iowa and upon the farm which
he there developed and cultivated both he and his wife spent their
remaining days. Unto Mr. & Mrs. Smith have been born eight
children: Ruby, Lois, Lottie, Ralph, Dart, LeRoy, Violet, and Lyle. The
family attend the Presbyterian church and Mr. Smith belongs to Ruby
Lodge, No. 415, A. F. & A. M., of Macedonia. For one term he served
as trustee of Grove Township, but has never been a politician in the
sense of office seeking, although he gives stalwart allegiance to the
Republican party.
John Smith bio written
by Nova Kuhr, submitted by Gail Meyer
Kilgore, Mar 2003
Henry Smith, Stephen Smith and Willard Smith bios extracted from History of Pottawattamie County 1907
by Field and Reed, submitted by Constance Diamond, 2003
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