History of Taylor County, Iowa: from the earliest
historic times to 1910 by Frank E. Crosson. Chicago, The S.J.
Clarke Publishing Co. 1910
|
(biographicals transcribed by Linda Kestner: lfkestner3@msn.com)
|
Page 278
FRANCIS EMERY CROSSON
Professor Francis E. Crosson, whose close connection with the educational
progress of Taylor county has constituted his life work as a vital and
valuable force in the development and upbuilding of this section of
the state, was born December 20, 1857, in Abingdon, Knox county, Illinois.
His parents were William Harvey and Asenath (Vinsonhaler) Crosson.
The father was born at Blanchester, Ohio, in 1833 and in 1855, when
a young man of twenty-two years, became a resident of Abingdon, Illinois,
where he was married in 1856 to Miss Asenath Vinsonhaler. He engaged
in farming until the outbreak of the Civil war, when he enlisted in
defense of the Union as a member of Company D, First Illinois Cavalry.
He participated in the battle of Lexington, Missouri, was captured by
Price, and paroled in 1865. Later he crossed the plains with other
gold seekers but after a year returned to Knox county, where he followed
farming until 1873. In that year he brought his family to Taylor
county, Iowa, and made his home upon the farm in Ross township until
his death, which occurred in August, 1894. His wife was born near
Hillsboro, Ohio, in 1835, and during her early girlhood accompanied
her parents to Abingdon, Illinois, where she was living at the time
of her marriage. Following the death of Mr. Crosson she was married,
in 1898, to Asa Stowell, of Gay township, and at present lives in Clearfield,
Taylor county.
Professor Crosson acquired his early education in the rural schools
of Illinois and Iowa, with a short time in the Bedford high school.
He then engaged in teaching for a few terms after which he had the benefit
of a year's instruction in Oskaloosa College, of Oskaloosa, Iowa, and
spent nearly two years in Drake University at Des Moines. His
taste and inclination, as manifested in (page 279) his youth, were along
the lines of reading and study, with preference for the sciences.
While in school he decided to prepare for the medical profession and
in one vacation spent much time with a physician in Des Moines.
He afterward returned to Taylor to engage in teaching that he might
thus be enabled to continue his studies as a preparation for the practice
of medicine, but became engrossed in school work and continued in that
field of activity until his election to the county superintendency in
1895. His first teaching was done in 1876 and was continued until
1879, when he entered college. In 1883 he again resumed his duties
as an instructor and with the exception of a year spent in newspaper
work in Lenox he taught continuously until 1895. He was then elected
county superintendent, serving from January 1, 1896, until January 1,
1902, and with one exception no other county superintendent of schools
in Taylor county has served as long. He was elected for a third
term, being the only county official ever thus chosen for more than
twenty years. In politics he has always been a republican, active
in his work for the party's interests, for he believes firmly in its
principles and seeks the general welfare through his support of its
candidates. After leaving the county superintendent's office he
was in the employ of Maynard, Merrill & Company, school-book
publishers, until 1905, when he became ill and the following year went
to Los Angeles, California, with a hope that the change of climate would
prove beneficial. The following year he returned to Taylor county,
where he is now living.
In 1887 Professor Crosson was married to Miss Alice Isabel Dougherty,
a daughter of Abner N. and Ellen Dougherty. Mrs. Crosson was born
in this county in 1863 and by her marriage has become the mother of
three children; Phil, who was born April 14, 1888, and died June 20,
1905; Mary, born January 20, 1892; and Ellen, born September 25, 1894.
The family are widely known in this county and occupy an enviable position
in those social circles where intelligence is regarded as a necessary
attribute to congeniality. For many years Professor Crosson has
been a loyal member of the Modern Woodmen of America, and since 1880
has been a consistent member of the Christian church. He holds
to high ideals and throughout his entire life he has done with his might
everything that his hand has found to do and performed all public service
with a sense of conscientious obligation.
|