History of Taylor County, Iowa: from the earliest
historic times to 1910 by Frank E. Crosson. Chicago, The S.J.
Clarke Publishing Co. 1910
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(biographicals transcribed by Linda Kestner: lfkestner3@msn.com)
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JOHN P. KEENAN
John P. Keenan is known as a progressive farmer, stock feeder and shipper
and since 1895 he has made his home in Blockton, where he owns a nice
residence, although he still retains possession of a valuable farm of
three hundred acres, located within a mile and a quarter of Blockton.
Mr. Keenan is a native of Greene county, Pennsylvania, born December 27,
1857, and came as a young man of eighteen years to the west, making a
location first in Taylor county, Iowa. He was here engaged three
years in herding cattle. Subsequently he purchased a farm in Ringgold
county, this state, and removing thereto, was engaged in its operation
for several years. He then returned to Taylor county and purchased
his present farm in Jefferson township, his place embracing three hundred
acres of fine farming land. For a long period Mr. Keenan gave his
entire attention to cultivating his farm and after taking possession he
built a new house, supplied with all conveniences, built a barn and other
outbuildings, set out an orchard and shade trees and his place is now
one of the valuable properties of Jefferson township and Taylor county.
While still residing on the farm he also fed stock on quite an extensive
scale, shipping annually about six carloads of cattle to the city markets.
In 1895 Mr. Keenan left the farm and purchased a residence in Blockton,
which he has since occupied. He is still engaged in buying and shipping
stock. He makes his purchases both in Iowa and Missouri and his
long experience in this line of business has made him an excellent
judge of stock, so that he is able to carry on a very profitable business.
It was during his residence in Ringgold county that Mr. Keenan was
married, the lady of his choice being Miss Minnie Norton, whom he wedded
February 18, 1884. Mrs. Keenan was born in Brown county, Illinois,
a daughter of M. K. Norton. The latter was born in Butler county,
Pennsylvania, and was there reared and married to Miss Rebecca Nelson,
a native of Indiana county, that state. While still residing in
the east Mr. Norton engaged in farming but in an early day went to
Brown county, Illinois, while in 1868 he continued his journey westward,
then locating in Ringgold county, Iowa. He there engaged in farming
and spent his remaining days, passing away in 1888. Mrs. Norton
survived for several years but is now deceased. Mr. and Mrs. Keenan
lost their only child, Hugh, who died when but eleven months old.
Mr. Keenan has been a life long democrat but would never consent to
hold public office, preferring to give his attention to this private business
affairs. He has always lived at peace with fellowmen. He has
never incurred an indebtedness, nor has he ever sued any man. Mrs.
Keenan is a member and an active worker in the Christian church.
They are people of the highest respectability, and Mr. Keenan has
a very wide acquaintance in Taylor and adjoining counties, his business
transactions taking him to various sections of this state and Missouri.
He has advanced year by year in the business world and today he stands
as one of the most prominent stock buyers and feeders of this section
of Iowa.
THOMAS BENTON KEPLINGER, M. D.
Dr. Thomas Benton Keplinger, a physician and surgeon of Conway, who
is successfully practicing, his ability bringing to him ready recognition
from those who need professional services of his character, has been a
resident of Taylor county from his boyhood days. His life record
is therefore as an open (page 688) book to the people of this community
and it is one which merits for him the esteem in which he is uniformly
held. Dr. Keplinger was born in Kosciusko county, Indiana, on the
26th of July, 1861. He came to Taylor county with his father in
1865 and supplemented his early educational privileges by study in Amity
College and in the state university, having graduated from the latter
institution with the class of 1881. He received the Bachelor of
Arts degree in 1885 and that of Master of Arts in 1888. In the meantime
he engaged in teaching in Nebraska for a few years, but in 1892, he returned
to the Iowa university, matriculating in the medical department, from
which he was graduated with the M.D. degree in 1895. He then located
in Cedar county, where he engaged in the practice of medicine and surgery,
continuing there until 1898. In that year he came to Conway, where
he has since made his home and in the intervening eleven years he has
built up a large practice. In the discharge of his professional
duties he is quite successful, for he is very careful in the diagnosis
of his cases, studies closely the conditions of his patients and is accurate
in the application of his scientific knowledge of specific needs.
Since coming to Conway he has taken a post-graduate course and is regarded
as one of the best trained and most thoroughly equipped physicians of
Taylor county.
Dr. Keplinger was united in marriage in this county on the 6th of September,
1891, to Miss Fannie Alderson, who was born in Cook county, Illinois,
and was reared in Taylor county, Iowa. She is a lady of superior
educational and social attainments and presides with gracious hospitality
over her pleasant home. Unto the doctor and his wife has been born
a daughter, Hattie Frances. The parents are active members of the
Conway Methodist Episcopal church and Dr. Keplinger belongs also to the
Masonic lodge, while he and his wife are both connected with the Eastern
Star, Mrs. Keplinger now serving as worthy matron of the chapter.
The doctor commenced life for himself as a poor boy and has made his way
upward from his youth, meeting the expenses of his different school and
college courses with the fruits of his own labor. The elemental
strength of his character, which he thus displayed in acquiring an education,
has been manifest throughout his entire life, and a laudable ambition
has prompted him to do the most efficient work possible for his patrons.
He is widely known as a leading physician and a progressive and public-spirited
citizen of Taylor county.
SAMUEL J. KEY
Samuel J. Key occupies a foremost place among the substantial, progressive
and well-to-do citizens of Grove township, who, entirely through their
own unaided efforts, have risen from a humble position to a place of prominence
and affluence in business circles. A native of North Carolina, he
was born in Surry county on the 17th of November, 1865, and is a son of
A. S. and Ellen (Whittaker) Key. When but a child his parents moved
to Indiana and later to Illinois, locating in Peoria county, where they
resided for about two years, and then, in 1880, came to Taylor county,
Iowa, the father here purchasing a place upon which a permanent home was
established. On that farm the family was reared and there the parents
continued to make their home until two years ago, but now live in Marshall
township.
Samuel J. Key was a lad of fourteen years when he arrived in Taylor
county with his parents, and his education which had been begun in the
schools of Indiana and Illinois, was completed in the district schools
near his father's home in this county. Upon the home farm he was
reared to manhood and when not busy with his text-books assisted in the
operation of the farm, continuing to give his father the benefit of his
labors until attaining his majority. Then, being desirous of entering
the business world for himself, he wisely chose as his life work the occupation
to which he had been reared and became identified with agricultural pursuits
on his own account as a renter, operating a farm in that capacity for
one year. He was married on the 15th of March, 1888, to Miss Rose
Gaudard, a native of Illinois, who was reared in Adams county, Iowa.
(Page 267) After his marriage Mr. Key again operated a rented farm
for several years, at the end of which time, desiring that his efforts
should more directly benefit himself, he purchased eighty acres of land,
upon which he resided for one year. He then sold that property at
a good advance over the purchase price, and invested in a larger farm,
becoming the owner of one hundred and ten acres. The following year
he purchased an adjoining tract of forty acres and two years later bought
a farm of eighty acres in Holt township, which he leased. Subsequently
he sold one of his farms and invested in the old Gordon farm of two hundred
and twenty acres in Grove township, later adding forty acres adjoining.
He continued in the cultivation of that property for about six years,
and then sold out and purchased the farm of two hundred and forty acres
upon which he now resides and to the further development of which he has
since directed his efforts. It is located on section 27, Grove township,
and under his wise and careful management has become one of the most highly
improved properties in the township. In its midst stands a neat
and attractive two-story residence, two good barns and substantial outbuildings,
including a double crib, tool house and scales, all in first class condition.
The place is equipped with all of the modern accessories and conveniences
for facilitating labor, and nothing is lacking that goes to make up a
model farm of the twentieth century. He also owns a tract of one
hundred and fifteen acres near the old home farm, all blue grass pasture
land, and another farm of two hundred and forty acres west of Lenox, likewise
under a high state of cultivation. He is one of the extensive stock-raisers
and feeders of the township, fattening a large amount of stock annually,
and the ready sale and good prices which his product commands upon the
market are a source of gratifying remuneration to him.
With the passing of the years the home of Mr. and Mrs. Key has been
blessed with three children, Ethel, Leroy L. and Russell D., all still
under the parental roof, the family being unbroken by the hand of death.
The entire family are members of the Blue Grove Christian church, of which
Mr. Key is serving as a deacon, while his wife and daughter are actively
and helpfully interested in Sunday-school work. Public-spirited
in his citizenship, he gives his political allegiance to the democratic
party on all national issues, but in local affairs reserves the right
of casting his ballot for the best man, regardless of party ties.
He has served as a member of the town board for several years and has
been identified with the schools for some time, serving first as director
and later as president of the board, the cause of education ever finding
in him a stanch champion. He is at present serving efficiently as
township trustee, and in every office to which he has been elected has
performed his public duties in a most thorough, faithful and entirely
satisfactory manner, at all times manifesting in his official capacity
the same thoroughness as characterized his business career. Thus
he has been called to various positions of honor and trust, showing that
he occupies a high place in public regard and enjoys in large measure
the confidence of his fellowmen. He possesses good business ability,
excellent judgment and keen discrimination, and although starting out
in life as a poor young man, with no capital except brains, energy, integrity
and good health, he has made continuous progress in the business world
until today he is one of the extensive landowners and large stock-dealers
in the township, possessing about six hundred acres of (page 268) valuable
land in three different farms. He is truly a self-made man in the
broadest sense of the term and the consensus of public opinion accords
him a prominent place among the representative and valued citizens of
Grove township.
A. E. KING, M. D.
He whose name introduces this record has gained recognition as one
of the best known and ablest physicians of Taylor county, and by his labors,
his high professional attainments and his sterling characteristics has
justified the respect and confidence in which he is held by the medical
fraternity and general public.
Dr. A. E. King was born in Coffey county, Kansas, May 31, 1858, a son
of Thomas and Louise J. (Moore) King. The former, who was born in
Ohio in 1836, came with his father, Isaac King, to Iowa in 1839, when
three years of age, a settlement being made in Lee county, this state.
Later he removed to Appanoose county and still later to Taylor county,
locating in Jefferson township. It was while residing in this county
that he was married to Miss Louise J. Moore, who was born and reared within
its borders. In early life he had been a teacher and taught the
first term of school in Platteville, Jefferson township. In 1856
he removed to Kansas, where he became identified with agricultural interests,
operating a farm there for a few years. Subsequently he spent a
winter in Clay county, Missouri, but in the spring of 1860, returning
to Taylor county, Iowa, and engaging in business as a merchant in Platteville.
Later he removed to Hawleyville, then to Platteville and in March, 1867,
to Mormontown, now called Blockton, where he became known as the pioneer
merchant, conducting the first store in that place. Here he spent
his remaining years, passing away in 1904, having long survived his wife,
whose death occurred October 18, 1862, in Platteville.
Dr. A. E. King arrived in Taylor county in 1860, when but two years
of age, and passed the years of his boyhood and youth in Jefferson township,
acquiring his early education in the common schools of that locality.
Later he decided to make the medical profession his life work and consequently
pursued a course of study in a medical college at Keokuk, Iowa, from which
he was graduated with the class of 1881. He immediately opened an
office for practice in Redding, Ringgold county, where he remained until
1894, in which year he came to Blockton, where he has since been engaged
in the general practice of medicine, with the exception of a few years
spent in further study. He attended the Hospital College of Medicine
at Louisville, Kentucky, from which he was graduated in 1894, while
he also pursued a post-graduate course at the Chicago Polyclinic in 1908.
He is thus well equipped for the practice of his profession and is ranked
among (page 503) the able physicians of Taylor county, being well known
as one of the oldest practitioners of Blockton and that locality, his
circle of acquaintances, friends and patrons extending for a radius of
fifty miles. He has built up a very large practice, his extensive
patronage coming to him as an expression of the trust and confidence reposed
in him by the general public. He is constantly broadening his knowledge
by study and research, recognizing fully the obligations that fall upon
the physician, and he keeps abreast of the progress being made in the medical
world through his membership in the State Medical Association, the Missouri
Valley Medical Association and the Taylor County Medical Society.
He is often called upon to prepare articles to be read before these assemblies.
He conducted a drug store in Blockton and was very successful in this
undertaking, but after five or six years was compelled to withdraw from
that business to devote his entire time and energies to his constantly
growing private practice.
Dr. King has been twice married. In 1878 he wedded Miss Ida May
Castor, a native of Missouri, where she was reared. She passed away
February 4, 1891, leaving, besides her husband to mourn her loss, one
son, Dr. T. W. King, a practicing physician of Meloy, Iowa. They
also lost one son, Joseph D., who died at the age of three years.
In November, 1893, Dr. King was united in marriage to Lydia J. Shuff,
a resident of Worth county, Missouri, and unto them were born three children,
but the eldest, Alberta Belle, died at the age of two years. The
others are Cecil Valentine and Ruth Madeline. The family reside
in a beautiful home in Blockton, which has just been completed by Dr.
King and is one of the fine, modern residences of this city.
Mrs. King is a member of the Christian church, while the Doctor holds
membership in the blue lodge of Masons, at Blockton, and also belongs
to the Knights of Pythias lodge. He gives his political allegiance
to the republican party but has never sought nor desired public office.
He is not, however, unmindful of his duties as a citizen, but gives earnest
support to all measures which have for their object the substantial growth
and development of the community. His ability and skill have been
demonstrated in the successful handling of a number of complex medical
problems and he is highly esteemed not only as a professional man but
also as a citizen and friend of humanity, who lives for the good he can
do his fellowmen.
W. E. KING
W. E. King, actively and busily engaged in general farming, his attention
and energies being directed to the further development and improvement
of two hundred acres of land on section 23, Jefferson township, has lived
in Iowa since 1883, at which time he took up his abode in Taylor county.
He is a western man by birth and training, having first opened his eyes
to the light of day in Schuyler county, Missouri, February 20, 1857.
His father, William King, was a native of Wilkes county, North Carolina,
where he was reared and there married Miss Ann Janette Call, also a native
of the same county. He followed farming in the Old North State until
1859 when he resolved to seek his fortune in Missouri and established
his home in Schuyler county, where he entered land from the government
and opened up a farm. His tract originally comprised eighty acres
but additional purchases from time to time had made him the owner of two
hundred (page 289) and forty acres constituting a well-improved and valuable
farm. Eventually, however, he sold that property and removed to
Worth county, Missouri, where he opened up a new farm on which he spent
his last years. There he died September 25, 1898, and thus was closed
a life of continuous usefulness and activity. His wife passed away
on the 13th of August, 1909. To her was accorded a premium at the
Old Settlers Association at Blockton on two or three occasions as being
the oldest person in this part of Iowa or Missouri.
W. E. King was reared on the old home place in Worth county and from
early youth assisted his father in tilling the fields and caring for the
crops After his father's death he and his brother took charge of
and carried on the place for a few years, displaying in its able
management the business ability and spirit of enterprise which have since
made him one of the leading and representative agriculturists of Taylor
county.
While living in Worth county, W. E. King was married on the 27th of
February, 1881, to Miss Louisa Weese. After their marriage they
lived in Missouri for two or three years, Mr. King carrying on farming
in Worth county and on the expiration of that period they came to Iowa where
he made investment in one hundred and twenty acres of land comprising
a part of the farm upon which he now resides. It was undeveloped and
unimproved land but he broke the sod, fenced the fields, erected the necessary
buildings and opened up the farm. Day by day added something to
the work he accomplished in transforming the place into productive fields.
After cultivating his land for some years Mr. King then rented the place
and removed to Worth county where he farmed his mother's land for five
years. He then returned to his old home and has since erected a
good residence and two good barns and outbuildings. He has
also set out an orchard and grove and the trees add much to the beauty
of the place. There was not a switch or stick upon the place when
he took possession and now there are various fruit trees together with
fine shade and ornamental trees. Mr. King has also added eighty
acres to his original tract and with the production of grain he also raises
and feeds cattle, horses and hogs. He likewise owns one hundred and
sixty acres in the panhandle of Texas, on which his son is now located and
his wife owns eighty acres of land in Worth county.
In 1899 Mr. King was called upon to mourn the loss of his first wife
who died on the 4th of June, of that year, leaving four sons and four
daughters, all of whom are yet living. These are: Charles E., now
of Texas; Zenis P., living in Blockton; Alvin N., and William D., who
are aiding in carrying on the home farm; Mina, Etta N., Jennie M. and
Bessie, all yet under the parental roof. In Taylor county Mr. King
was again married, his second union being with Mrs. Melvina Ethridge,
a widow who only lived for about two years after their marriage.
In Worth county, Missouri, on the 20th of May, 1906, Mr. King wedded Catherine
Drummins, also a widow and a native of Ohio. She was reared, however,
in Iowa and Missouri and was married in Worth county of the latter
state to James Thomas Drummins, a farmer of that locality.
By her former marriage she had one son, Ulysses S. Drummins, now of Worth
county.
In his political views Mr. King has been a lifelong democrat, casting
his first presidential vote for Grover Cleveland and his last for William
Jennings Bryan. He has never sought nor desired office for himself
but has served as a member (page 290) of the school board. Both
he and his wife are members of the Christian church of Blockton and are
both active workers in the church and Sunday-school, doing all in their
power to promote the growth and extend the influence of the church in
its efforts for the moral redemption of the race. Mr. King is well
known in this section of the country where he has long resided and
where his labors have been so directed that intelligent and unremitting
effort has brought to him a gratifying competence.
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