Newton H. Hyde, who is a well known photographer
of Manchester, was born near Lansing, Michigan, on the 18th of March, 1866, a
son of Joseph W. and Harriett (Fiero) Hyde, the former born in New York, January
25, 1830, and the latter in the same state in 1836. The father was a farmer by
occupation and in the later years of his life came to Iowa, passing away in
Manchester, at the home of the subject of this review, on the 17th of January,
1896. The mother died in Dakota in 1888. Four of the children born to their
union grew to maturity, namely: Mary, the deceased wife of James Madden, of
Albuquerque, New Mexico; Lucy, the deceased wife of George Bairy, of South
Dakota; Newton H.; and Julia, the wife of Daniel Fletcher, of Santa Monica,
California.
Newton H. Hyde ran a studio in Chamberlain, South
Dakota, for about eight years and in 1888 came to Manchester, where he has since
conducted a studio. He was married July 1, 1887, to Miss Mary Johnson, a native
of Minnesota and a daughter of John and Aslog (Jensen) Johnson, both natives of
Norway. The father died in Minnesota when quite a young man but the mother still
lives in that state. Mr. and Mrs. Hyde are the parents of two daughters, Laura
Emma and Aida Elizabeth.
Mr. Hyde is a democrat and an advocate of the
single tax in his political belief and served for four years, from 1907 to 1911,
in the city council. His religious allegiance is given to the Congregational
church and fraternally he is a Mason and a Knight of Pythias. He belongs to an
old American family as the Hydes have traced their genealogy in this country
back to colonial days. Mr. Hyde has proven himself worthy of such ancestry and
is in every respect a loyal and useful American citizen.
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