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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(transcribed by Linda Kestner: lfkestner3@msn.com)
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Page 339
ALEXANDER C. BRICE
Alexander C. Brice is numbered among the veterans of the Civil war
and when he enlisted, was the youngest member of his regiment.
Throughout his entire life he has been equally loyal and patriotic in
his devotion to the general good and in civil office as well as in military
life has demonstrated his devotion to his country. In his local
connections he is well known as the senior partner of the Brice Company
of Bedford, owning and conducting one of the finest grocery stores in
southwestern Iowa. He has long been a resident of this part of
the state and from pioneer times down to the present, has enjoyed an
excellent reputation as a business man and citizen, being honored and
respected by all who know him. He was born in Montgomery county,
Ohio, about six miles from Dayton, July 1, 1844. His paternal
grandfather, Alexander Cooper Brice, was a native of Virginia and became
a minister of the Presbyterian church. He died in the Old Dominion
at an advanced age after having devoted many years to redemptive work.
His family numbered four sons and five daughters, including Washington
Brice, who was also a native of Virginia. In early life, however,
he became a resident of Montgomery county, Ohio, where he was reared.
There he turned his attention in a business way to the raising of tobacco
and in 1850 he removed westward to Lee county, Iowa, where his death
resulted from a runaway accident in 1861, when he was forty-five years
of age. In early manhood he had wedded Priscilla Martha Snodgrass, a
native of Pennsylvania, who had also gone to Montgomery county, Ohio,
at an early day. Her father was a native of the Keystone state,
was of Holland Dutch descent and devoted his life to farming.
He removed to Iowa in the fall of 1852, settling at West Point, Lee
county, where he carried on general agricultural pursuits until his
death when he was sixty-eight years of age. His widow long survived
him, reaching the remarkable old age of ninety-two years. They
had a large family, numbering eight daughters and four or five sons.
The marriage of Mr. and Mrs. Washington Brice was blessed with four
children: Alexander C., of this review; Samuel S., a resident of Taylor
county, Iowa; Belle, the wife of J. R. Sater, residing near Lenox, Iowa;
and Hattie, the wife of E. L. Osborn, of Montrose, Colorado. The
mother survived her husband for a long period and departed this life
in 1894, at the age of seventy-nine. Both were consistent members
of the Presbyterian church.
Alexander C. Brice lived in Montgomery county, Ohio, until six years
of age and then came to Iowa with his parents, who settled in Lee county,
where he remained until 1861. Constrained by a spirit of patriotism,
he then offered his services to the government, enlisting as a member
of Company C, First Iowa Cavalry, when not quite seventeen years of
age. He served for five years, lacking one month and a half.
He joined the army as a private and was mustered out as a sergeant.
He was the youngest member of the regiment at the time of his enlistment
and for two years after he went to the front, his command was engaged
in fighting bushwhackers in Missouri and Arkansas. Later he participated
in the battle of Prairie Grove, Bayou Meter, Little Rock and in many
other important engagements in the west. During one campaign he
was for thirty-nine days under fire.
After the war Mr. Brice returned to Iowa and a year later went to
Dallas county, Iowa, where he was engaged in the grocery and woolen
goods business, his store being located in the county seat. After
two and a half years he removed to Richmond, Missouri, where he engaged
in building railroad bridges under contract and there lived for six
years. He next came to Taylor county, Iowa, and was in the fruit
business at Lenox. In 1890, he was elected county treasurer and
served in that position for two years, after which he was appointed
consul to Cuba by President Cleveland and continued in official service
there until the outbreak of the war on that island. He then returned
home to Bedford, Iowa, where he has since lived and, establishing a
grocery store, he has since been its proprietor, while associated with
him in its conduct are his sons, Elmer T. and G. B., under the firm
name of the Brice Company. They have one of the finest grocery
stores in southwestern Iowa, carrying a large and well selected line
of staple and fancy groceries, while their annual sales reach a large
figure.
In 1866, Mr. Brice was married to Miss Elizabeth Berry, of Richmond,
Missouri, and unto them were born three children: Alice J., the
wife of Rufus Woodring, by whom she had four children, Elizabeth, Theressa,
Rufus and Catherine, who is deceased; Kate H., who is the wife of George
Bubb and lives in Parsons, Kansas, with their three children, Ruth,
Bernice and Elsie May; and Elmer T. The wife and mother died in
1876, and Mr. Brice afterward wedded Miss Phebe Arabel Kenyon, a daughter
of George W. and Ruth Elizabeth (Green) Kenyon. The four children
of that marriage are: George Basil; Alexander C.; Esperanza; and Calvin
S., who is deceased. Mrs. Phebe Brice was called to her final
rest in 1904. She was a devoted member of the Presbyterian church,
to which Mr. Brice also belongs and he is a member of Taylor Lodge,
No. 156, A. F. & A. M. Politically he is an earnest democrat
but has never been very active as an office seeker. He has preferred
to concentrate his energies upon his business affairs and at one time
he owned nine or ten buildings in Bedford, where he still has a fine
home property, together with eight acres of farm land. A lover
of the beautiful and especially as manifest in flower creations, he
has a garden of over fifteen hundred varieties of flowering plants.
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