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Fayette County, Iowa
History Directory
Past and Present of Fayette County Iowa, 1910
Author: G. Blessin
B. F. Bowen & Company, Indianapolis, Indiana
Vol. I, Biographical Sketches
~Page 622~
Edwin O. Moore
The gentleman whose name
forms the caption of this biographical review has long enjoyed
distinctive precedence as one of Fayette county's most enterprising and
successful agriculturists and stock raisers, who is at present managing
a popular and well patronized creamery in West Union, and, besides
enjoying the reputation of one of the county's representative men of
affairs, he has at the same time won a reputation for honesty and square
dealing in all the relations of life. Samuel Wallace, who was
born in Pennsylvania, June 18, 1838, received a common school education
and when seventeen years old joined the church of which his father was
minister, the United Brethren denomination, and at the age of twenty
began preaching, receiving license from the general conference in 1860:
he preached in Linn Co. Iowa one year, and on July 3, 1861, married Mary
Dresser, and one child was born to them, but died in infancy. On August
13, 1862, Rev. Moore enlisted in Company D, Twenty-first Iowa Infantry,
with the rank of sergeant, and he proved to be a gallant soldier, and
was fatally wounded May 18. 1863, at Black River Bridge, Mississippi,
dying almost instantly, and his body was buried on the field, thus
cutting short a very promising career. Mrs. Mary J. Dye, next in order
of birth, was born April 23, 1840, in Beaver county, Pennsylvania, and
she has for many years lived in Windsor township, Fayette county, Iowa;
she first married, on March 18, 1860, Josiah W. Hardy, a teacher of
superior attainments, who enlisted in Company D, Twenty-first Iowa
Infantry, on August 13, 1862, and died in St. Louis, May 25, 1863; their
only child, Clara S., who was born July 6, 1861, married N. A. Shaw and
they live on a farm in Fayette County. On June 2, 1864, Mrs. Mary J.
Hardy married Andrew Dye a widower having two children, and this union
resulted in the birth of eight children, Vernie E., Addie E., Edwin H.,
Minnie A., Bertie, Henry S., Melvia E. and Sophia Beulah. Mr. Dye's
death occurred on January 21, 1890. Vesta A. Moore, was the third child
in order of birth, her birth having occurred on April 19, 1842. She
married Thomas J. Rice, in 1861; she married Daniel Shaffer, of Tama
City, Iowa, in 1882; three children were born of her first union, Samuel
Wallace, William O. and Katie; the two former are married. Samantha R.
married Peter McKellar and she died October 31, 1894; Roxie A., born
December 18, 1845, became the wife of George W. Fitch, of West Union.
Minerva R., wife of Austin R. Moats, of Cedar Rapids, was born June 19,
1847, and is the mother of eight children. Robert Clark, born September
4, 1850, married Elizabeth Moats, and resides in Longwood, Custer
County, Nebraska; they have six children, four living. Edwin Osborn
Moore, the immediate subject of this review. Jasper Smith Moore was born
May 20, 1854, married Mary Crane, and upon the homestead in Illyria
township they are living with their five children. Francis Kirkwood
Moore was born September 20, 1857, and died January 25, 1893; he married
Nettie Clements and had one child.
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