Dennis
Holdren, a well known and valued resident of Earlville, was born in
Delaware county, Indiana, on the 14th of October, 1836. He is now in the
seventy eighth year of his age but he has not put aside all business cares and
is still interested in poultry and active in conducting a business along that
line. His parents were George Washington and Elsie Margaret (Shidler) Holdren,
who were of French and Scotch descent. Both were born in Athens county, Ohio,
and there were reared and married. They had a family of fourteen children, of
whom but three are yet living: Dennis, of this review; Mathias, who is still a
resident of Delaware county, Indiana; and Sarah, the wife of Edmund Turner, of
Earlville.
In his youthful days Dennis Holdren attended one of the
old-time schools of Indiana, the little temple of learning being a log
building, in which the seats were made of split logs, while goose quill pens
were used in writing. On leaving home Mr. Holdren walked from Hartford City,
Indiana, across the state to Illinois and on to East Burlington, covering the
distance in twenty one days. He then came to Iowa in 1856. For a time he
engaged in chopping wood and the next spring he returned to his native county.
This was in the year 1857. He had appreciation for the opportunities offered
in Iowa and on the 21st of May, 1858, again arrived in this state, taking up
his abode in North Fork township, Delaware county, where he engaged in raising
sugar cane.
It was not long afterward that Mr. Holdren completed
his arrangements for having a home of his own through his marriage on the 15th
of December, 1859, to Miss Ellen Smither, a daughter of Joel and Martha
(Bailey) Smither, and to them were born twelve children: Susan Frances, now
the wife of L. W. Myers of Minnesota; Carrie L., living in Portland, Oregon;
George D., who was born in 1863 and is now in North Dakota; Effie, who was
born May 5, 1865, and is now in Portland; Ida, a resident of Earlville;
Martha, the wife of Frank De Shaw; John Milton, a resident of Montana; one who
died in infancy; William Thomas, who died at the age of three months; William
August, of Rockford, Iowa: Samuel Tilden, of Manchester; and Dick, also of
Manchester.
Following his marriage Mr. Holdren engaged in the cultivation
of a rented farm for a time and in 1865 purchased a forty-two acre tract of
land in Delhi township. He then sold that property and bought eighty acres in
North Fork township, upon which he resided until 1887. He then left that place
and for a year thereafter was employed at hauling cream. In 1889 he took up
his abode in Earlville, purchasing a block of ground and building a home. The
following year he began raising poultry and has since continued in that
business, which he has carefully and successfully managed, gaining a good
living thereby.
In 1911 Mr. Holdren was called upon to mourn the loss
of his wife, who passed away on the 2d of May of that year, her death being
deeply regretted by many friends. Mr. Holdren still makes his home in
Earlville, where he is widely and favorably known. In politics he is a
democrat and for twenty years filled the office of constable. He has done
campaign work for his party and has taken an active and helpful interest in
public affairs relating to the upbuilding and development of his section of
the state. Working earnestly year after year, he has gained the success which
is today his and at the same time an upright life has won for him the goodwill
and confidence of those with whom he has been brought in contact.
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