Lewis
Greenleaf Hersey was for many years a stockman of Oneida township and the
cattle king of Delaware county and was as well prominent in political circles,
serving as a representative in the lower house of the state legislature and
also as state senator. He was born in Maine on the 1st of October, 1828, a son
of James and Olive Hersey, both likewise natives of the Pine Tree state, where
their entire lives were spent.
The subject of this review was the youngest in a family
of seven children. He was reared and educated in Maine but in 1851 he started
for California, thinking, as did many others, to find there great wealth. He
remained for two years in the Golden state, after which he returned to Maine,
where he lived with his parents for eight years. There he engaged in the
manufacture of shoes until 1863, when he came west and located in Oneida
township, this county, devoting his time to general farming for a year. After
that he went into the stock business and so continued during the greater part
of his life. He was an authority upon everything pertaining to the raising of
stock for the market and his judgment rarely failed him in buying or selling,
so that he gained a gratifying income. He was also connected for a time with a
general store at Earlville and was a man of much practical wisdom and strong
common sense, these qualities making him a valuable state representative and
state senator. He was elected to the former position from Delaware county in
1882; and the latter in 1875. His fellow citizens never had occasion to regret
calling him to these offices of trust and honor, as he used his influence to
secure the passage of measures that proved beneficial to the state at large.
Mr. Hersey married Miss Mary Ann Crafts, a native of Maine,
and to their union were born three children: Lewis T., deceased; Nellie L.,
the wife of Herbert Bush, of DeKalb, Illinois; and James E., a resident of
Texas. Mrs. Hersey died in 1862 and was laid to rest in her native state. The
following year Mr. Hersey was again married, Miss Flora O. Bolster becoming
his wife. She was born in Maine on the 12th of July, 1834, a daughter of Jacob
and Ruth (Daggett) Bolster, both natives of the same state. Her parents spent
their entire lives in Maine and to their union were born eight children, of
whom Mrs. Hersey is the third in order of birth. Those of the family who still
survive are: Mrs. Hersey; Mrs. Hattie Sturtevant, of Maine; and Mrs. Delia
Eaton, a resident of Montana. To Mr. Hersey's second marriage four children
were born, as follows: Samuel F., a resident of Cedar Falls and a teacher in
the State Normal school at that place; Gertrude, the wife of Albert Knowles, a
business man of Chicago; Hattie Grace, at home, who graduated from the
Earlville high school and attended Iowa College at Grinnell, Iowa; and Ruth
M., the wife of W. E. Cattron, of Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Mr. Hersey was a republican and his advice was often
sought in the local councils of that party. Fraternally he be longed to the
Independent Order of Odd Fellows and the Modern Woodmen of America, and his
religious faith was indicated by his membership in the Congregational church.
His wife belongs to the same church and is much interested in all movements
that seek the moral uplift of the community. Mr. Hersey passed away on the 8th
of May, 1903, and was laid to rest in the Fairview cemetery. Although his
demise occurred more than a decade ago his good works live after him and his
memory is held in the highest esteem.
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