from Biography & Historical Record of Ringgold County, Iowa
Lewis Publishing Company of Chicago, 1887, Pp. 353-54
JONATHAN LONG
Jonathan LONG, living on section I, Jefferson Township, was born in Noble County, Ohio, September 9, 1836, a son
of Samuel LONG, a native of Fayette County, Pennsylvania, and an early pioneer of Noble County, Ohio, now deceased. Our
subject spent his youth in helping his father with the work on the farm, and his education was such as the log-cabin
subscription schools of that early day afforded. He has been twice married, his first marriage taking place June 17,
1858, with Miss Harriett REDD, a daughter of Peter REDD who was one of the early settlers of Guernsey County, Ohio, and
to this union three children were born – Samuel, Dora and Mary. His first wife died in June, 1864, and in August, 1865,
he was again married to Rachel BAXTER, a native of Guernsey County, Ohio, her father, John BAXTER, being born in the same
county. To this union have been born nine children – Frank E., John B., Nathaniel B., Sadie C., Carrie L., Anna V.,
Lizzie I., Charles W. and Alice C., all but Alice being born in Guernsey County, Ohio. Mr. LONG came with his family
to Ringgold County, Iowa, in January, 1880, and settled on his present farm containing 240 acres of well-cultivated land.
Mr. and Mrs. LONG and their daughter, Sadie, are members of the United Presbyterian church. The father of our subject
[Samuel LONG] emigrated from Pennsylvania to Ohio in a very early day, making the entire journey with his wife and one child with one
horse, he leading the horse on which his wife and child sat. The Indians were the principal inhabitants of Noble County
at that time, and there they experienced all the hardships and privations of pioneer life. At one time the father paid
his last money, 50 cents, for a sack of corn which he took twenty miles to mill to be ground, while the mother and her
children lived on parched corn and deer meat. Their nearest neighbor was five miles distant. Both parents are now
deceased.
NOTE: Jonathan's father, Samuel Alexander LONG was born in 1787, Pennsylvania, and died in 1865. Mary
(?) LONG, Samuel's wife and Jonathan's mother, was born in 1880, and died in 1849. Samuel and Mary were interred
at old Sharon Cemetery, Noble County, Ohio.
Jonathan LONG was born in 1835 (according to his gravestone and cemetery transcriptions), and
died in 1915. Rachel J. (BAXTER) LONG was born in 1844, and died in 1927. Jonathan and Rachel's daughter Anne Viola
LONG's name is engraved on the parent's gravestone with an inscription "Buried in Eugene IA." Anne was born circa
1874, and died circa 1891.
Samuel A. LONG, son of Jonathan and Harriett (REDD) LONG, was born in 1860, and died in 1934, with
interment at Oakland Cemetery, Ringgold County, Iowa.
Franklin Ewing "Frank" LONG, son of Jonathan and Rachel (BAXTER) LONG, was born in 1866, and died in 1949.
John Baxter LONG, son of Jonathan and Rachel (BAXTER) LONG, was born in 1868, and died in 1915.
Nathanel Braden LONG, son of
Jonathan and Rachel (BAXTER) LONG, was born September 25, 1869, and died November 15, 1945. He was married October 10, 1900,
to Lottie RIDDLE. Lottie (RIDDLE) LONG was born
and died They were interred at Oakland Cemetery, Ringgold County, Iowa.
Sadie Cleone LONG, daughter of Jonathan and Rachel (BAXTER) LONG, was born circa 1872, and died in 1954.
Carrie A. LONG, daughter of Jonathan and Rachel (BAXTER) LONG, was born circa 1874, and married Josiah FERGUSON.
Charles Milton Long, son of Jonathan and Rachel (BAXTER) LONG, was born in 1877, and died in 1948.
Lizzie Imogene Long, daughter of Jonathan and Rachel (BAXTER) LONG, was born circa 1880, and married R. O. FERGUSON.
Alice Christy Long, daughter of Jonathan and Rachel (BAXTER) LONG, was born circa 1882, and married Nevin OLIPHANT.
The Gazette Mitchell County, Kansas Thursday, May 24, 1894
Peter B. REDD, aged 82 years [born circa 1812, Ohio], died at the residence of his son-in-law, Jacob ZIMMERMAN, six
miles southeath of the city [Beloit, Kansas], yesterday morning [May 23, 1894], of general debility and old age. Mr.
REDD was an old resident of the county, and leaves many friends who sympathize with the bereaved relatives.
John S. REDD is one of the highly respected residents of the historic city of
Moundsville, where he is living a retired life of ease and affluence. He is
of ancient lineage, dating his ancestry back for several hundred years, and
ever since the middle of the eighteenth century members of the Redd family
have been conspicuous in the various activities of the Old Dominion and West
Virginia. In the commercial as well as in the military field they have won
renown and have at at times held prominent positions in the community.
Nathaniel REDD, the illustrious great-grandfather of John S. REDD, was
born in Virginia in 1749, of German parentage, and he became the originator
of the family in America; he had fifteen children, one hundred and forty-four
grandchildren and sixty-six great-grandchildren. Peter REDD, one of his
sons, was born in Washington county, Pennsylvania, May 18, 1773, and married
Hannah DOLMAN in 1816, to which union the following children were born: John,
born in 1817; Nathaniel, in 1818; Samuel. 1820: Mary, 1822; Joseph, 1823;
Catherine, 1824; Susanna, 1826, Hannah M., 1827; Andrew, 1829; Elizabeth,
1830; Soloman, 1832; George D., 1834: and Harriet, 1838 [who was the first wife of Jonathan LONG].
Solomon, a brother of Peter, son of Nathaniel and father of John S., was
born at Pigeon Creek, Washington county, Pennsylvania. In, 1852 he moved to
Virginia, there married and became the parent of the following family:
Thomas, Samuel, Sarah A., Margaret, Susan, Parker S., Solomon and John S., of
which number only the last named is living. Parker S. and John S. were both
members of Company C, Twelfth West Virginia Volunteer Infantry, and the
former was killed in action.
John S. REDD was born in 1836, in Washington county, Pennsylvania, and
in 1852 he accompanied his father to Virginia. On the 16th of August, 1862,
he enlisted as a private in the same company with his brother Parker, and
served a period of three years, during which time he engaged in numerous
battles of importance, notable among which may be mentioned the battles of
Winchester and Newmarket. He has reason to remember the engagement at
Newmarket, as in its course he was wounded in the right leg and still carries
the bullet in his limb. He was honorably discharged in June, 1865, and has
continued to retain an interest in his companions at arms, being a member of
the Grand Army of the Republic.
In 1858 Mr. REDD married Miss Elizabeth WELLMAN, descendant of an old
Virginian family and grand-daughter of one of the heroes in the Revolutionary
War. Of the six children who were born to Mr. and Mrs. REDD, Susanna, Melissa
and William B. are deceased and Mrs. Mary COX, Lenora and Ionia are living.
The family is held in high esteem in Moundsville.
SOURCES:
Biography & Historical Record of Ringgold County, Iowa, Pp. 353-54, 1887.
WPA Graves Survey
WINEGERTER, Charles. Greater Wheeling and Vicinity p. 778. 1912
Transcription and note by Sharon R. Becker, March of 2009
Biographical Sketches Pages Index: A - F,
G - L,
M - R, S - Z
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