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Richard Franklin Dewey
The well known and successful
auctioneer and deputy sheriff of Fayette county, Richard Franklin Dewey,
is eminently deserving of a place in his county's history, as a resume of
his past record will readily attest. He was born March 18, 1866, in this
county, and is the son of William and Lucy (Ropes) Dewey, the father a
native of western Indiana, who came to Dover township, Fayette county,
Iowa, among the early settlers, when this country was practically a
wilderness, and here he bought a farm upon which the family lived for many
years; it was mostly unimproved timber land, one hundred and forty acres
in Turkey river valley. Selling that farm, he bought another a mile east
of West Union which he improved and on which he ended his days; however,
his death occurred in West Union in 1906 at a ripe old age. The mother
died on the farm east of here. They were excellent people of the rugged,
honest pioneer type.
The Ropes family, as represented by Mrs. Dewey, came from New England and
located in Dover township, Fayette county, Iowa, prior to the Deweys. B.
H. Ropes was a merchant of Eldorado in the early days and he served
several times as a member of the county board of supervisors. His brother,
Charles F. Ropes, was the grandfather of Richard F. Dewey of this review.
Nine children were born to Mr. and Mrs. William Dewey, five of whom are
now living, namely: George and John died in infancy, the former born in
1862 and the latter in 1864; Richard F. of this review and Charles G. were
twins; the latter is located at LeRoy, Kansas, married Minnie Bradley, of
Buchanan county, Iowa, and they became the parents of four children, two
sons and one daughter, living, and Minnie E., who died when eighteen years
of age, unmarried, she having been born in 1868; Anna May is the wife of
E. C. Grimes and lives on a farm in Union township; James Baker died when
twenty-seven years of age, unmarried; he was a graduate of the Iowa State
Dental College, and was a demonstrator in the university when stricken
with his fatal illness, thus cutting short a life of much promise; Addie
I. is a resident of Cochran, California; however, her home is in Los
Angeles; she is a stenographer by profession ; Alta C. is with her sister
in California.
"Frank". Dewey, as he is familiarly called, was educated in the public
schools and the Upper Iowa University at Fayette. He followed farming with
his father until he was twenty-four years of age, later farmed on his own
account until 1900. On April 3, 1890, he married Kittie L. Ordway, a
native of Janesville, Wisconsin, and a daughter of Alva Ordway, who
located in Fayette county, Iowa, in an early day and died in the town of
Fayette. Prior to her marriage Mrs. Dewey was a teacher.
Four children have been born to Mr. and Mrs. Dewey, namely: Glenn L., born
January, 1891, is living on the old homestead in Dover township; he is a
graduate of the West Union high school, is a member of the high school
brass band, and he is a vocalist of more than ordinary attainments for one
of his years. He is now a student of electrical engineering in the Iowa
State College at Ames. Lloyd C. Dewey, born in April, 1895, is attending
the local high school; William Earl and Eva M. are also in school.
Mr. Dewey has been an auctioneer since 1894, and has attained an enviable
record as a salesman, his reputation having long since transcended the
borders of his own county, and his services are in great demand. He has
successfully handled five hundred sales during the past five and one-half
years. On March 4, 1904, he was graduated from the Graham Auction School,
at Des Moines. This is an institution designed to fully qualify its
students for practical work on the auction block. He has sold a vast
quantity of goods, almost entirely general farm sales and blooded stock.
He is one of the best judges of live stock that could be found, not only
of horses, but also mules cattle and hogs, and he has been a very
successful breeder of Poland-China hogs, and he holds a certificate as an
expert judge of all kinds of blooded stock; this was granted by the Expert
Judge Association of the United States.
Fraternally, Mr. Dewey is a member of the Ancient Free and Accepted
Masons, West Union Lodge No. 69, of which he is senior warden, and he is
also a member of the Modern Woodmen of America and he also belongs to the
Knights of Pythias; he has filled nearly all of the official stations in
the Masonic order. Politically, he is a Republican, and the Dewey family
are members of the Methodist Episcopal church. Mr. Dewey is a fine example
of the successful self-made man and is deserving of the high esteem in
which he is held.
~transcribed for the Fayette Co IAGenWeb Project by Cheryl
Walker
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