History of Taylor County, Iowa: from the earliest
historic times to 1910 by Frank E. Crosson. Chicago, The S.J.
Clarke Publishing Co. 1910
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(biographicals transcribed by Linda Kestner: lfkestner3@msn.com)
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Page 335
J. T. CURPHEY
J. T. Curphey, a prominent and well known resident of Lenox, is numbered
among the prosperous and representative farmers and stockmen of Platte
township, owning a valuable farm of two hundred and forty acres on section
10. His birth occurred in Cuyahoga county, Ohio, on the 18th of
July, 1861, his parents being Robert and Margaret (Cain) Curphey, both
of whom were natives of the Isle of Man, where four of their children
were born. In 1858 they crossed the Atlantic to the new world,
settling in Cuyahoga county, Ohio, where the father reared his family.
At the time of the Civil war, he enlisted (page 336) in defense of the
Union as a member of the Forty-sixth Ohio Volunteer Infantry, with which
he remained until discharged on account of disability, having been shot
through the leg. On recovering from his injury he once more enlisted,
joining the One Hundred and Second Ohio Volunteer Infantry, with which
he served until the close of hostilities between the north and the south,
being honorably discharged in August, 1865. His demise occurred
in March, 1907, when he had attained the venerable age of ninety-three
years, while his wife had been called to her final rest in 1905 at the
age of eighty years.
J. T. Curphey spent the first sixteen years of his life in the county
of his nativity and there pursued his education. On leaving the Buckeye
state he made his way to Iroquois county, Illinois, where he worked
by the month as a farm hand for several years. Subsequently he
removed to Custer county, Nebraska, where he homesteaded a claim of
one hundred and sixty acres, opened up a farm and devoted his attention
to general agricultural pursuits for ten years. Returning to Iroquois
county, Illinois, he was there married on the 26th of May, 1886, to
Miss Carrie Barnum, a native of Tazewell county Illinois. When
seven years of age she was brought by her parents to Iroquois county,
where she was educated, completing a course at the Grand Prairie Seminary
on Onarga. For about two years prior to her marriage she successfully
followed the profession of teaching. The young couple began their
domestic life on the Nebraska farm -- fifty-five miles from the nearest
railroad. Mr. Curphey hauled the lumber for his house and barn
from Kearney, a distance of one hundred miles. As the years went
by he brought the fields under a high state of cultivation and placed
a number of substantial improvements on the property, which still remains
in his possession. In 1893, he leased the place and again returned
to Illinois, purchasing a farm of one hundred and sixty acres in Iroquois
county, in the operation and improvement of which he was actively engaged
until 1900, when he sold out to good advantage. In that year he
came to Taylor county, Iowa, and bought his present farm of two hundred
and forty acres on section 10, Platte township, to the cultivation and
further improvement of which he has since given his time and energies.
There were two good barns on the place but he has erected another, has
also rebuilt and remodeled the residence and has both a double and single
corn crib, a hog house, and so forth. He has partly tiled the
land and altogether has a very valuable and productive farm, the
field annually yielding golden harvests in return for the care and labor
which is bestowed upon them. Since coming to his county he has
made a specialty of the raising and feeding of shorthorn cattle and
Percheron horses and is a well known dealer in pure blooded stock, having
bred and sold some fine animals. In March, 1909, he purchased
a nice residence in Lenox, where he has recently established his home
in order that his children may enjoy the advantages of the Lenox schools.
Unto Mr. and Mrs. Curphey have been born two sons and three daughters,
as follows: Ross E., a farmer by occupation, who is married and
makes his home in Lenox, Elva and Robert Harold, both of whom are high
school students; Edith, who is likewise attending school at Lenox; and
Grace Lucile.
Since age conferred upon him the right of franchise Mr. Curphey has
given his political allegiance to the men and measures of the republican
party. He served as highway commissioner while a resident of Iroquois
county, Illinois, and likewise acted a a member of the board of education
there. He has also been a school director in Nebraska and in this
county, having served in that capacity altogether for twenty-two years.
Both he and his wife attend the Methodist Episcopal church and he contributes
to its support.
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