OTHER SETTLERS of BENTON TOWNSHIP, CASS COUNTY, IOWA
Richard F. PARMELY, resides on the east half of the southwest quarter of
section 11. He also owns a farm in Exira Township, Audubon County. He settled
here in 1866, purchasing the place of Calvert STRALL, The only improvements
were eighteen acres broken. He was born at Niles, Michigan, in September,
1836. He removed with his parents to Iowa, in 1847. They settled at
Coltonville, Jackson County. He came, in 1857, to Audubon County, which was
then thinly populated, and the townships were not organized. Game, at that
time, was plenty, including deer and elk. He was married in Audubon County,
August 25, 1862, to Mary E. JOHNSON, who was born in Adams County, Illinois.
They have four children - Perry F., Rosella, Myron, and Pearl A. The two
eldest were born in Audubon County. As Mr. PARMELY went to Jackson County in
1847, and to Audubon County ten years later, he has spent much of his life on
the frontier. He built his house here in 1866, drawing his lumber for that
purpose from Des Moines, a distance of eighty-six miles, by the wagon road. It
took five days to make the trip. His father, Dennis PARMELY, was a native of
Erie County, New York, born in 1813. He removed to Michigan, where he was
married, and, as before stated, came to Iowa in 1847. He now lives in Dexter,
Dallas County. During the winter of 1860 and '61, two brothers-in-law of Mr.
PARMELY, Daniel and Luke IMUS, started on foot to go from Hamlin's Grove,
Audubon County, to Mount Ayr, in Ringgold County. Nearly the entire distance
to Fontanelle, Adair County, was unbroken prairie. A terrible storm arose,
during which the brothers perished on the prairie. One was found dead upon the
prairie, the other succeeded in reaching a small, unoccupied house, where he
was found frozen to death. They were buried in Hamlin Cemetary, in Audubon
County. The younger brother, Luke, is supposed to have died first, as he was
found about six miles from the elder brother's body, laid out in proper shape
for burial. A satchel was placed under his head and his shawl was wrapped
about his head. Their bodies laid about three weeks on the prairie before
discovered, and when found, the mice had eaten the flesh off the side of Luke's
face, disfiguring it so that friends hardly recognized him. They perished
between Morrison's Station and Fontanelle, at that time an unsettled prairie
for twenty miles.
SOURCE: History of Cass County, Iowa Pp. 640-41. Continental Historical Society.
Springfield, Illinois. 18847.
Transciption by Sharon R. Becker, June of 2009
To submit your Ringgold County biographies, contact
The County Coordinator.
Please include the word "Ringgold" in the subject line. Thank you.
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