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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JAMES W. WALKER
Farm work has always claimed and occupied the attention of James
W. Walker, who, depending upon this occupation for his livelihood, has
won his success by persistent, earnest and honorable effort. He
lives on section 9, Jackson township, and is numbered among its public-spirited
citizens as well as progressive farmers and stock-raisers. His
holdings cover one hundred acres, constituting a neat and well improved
farm, the thrifty appearance of the place being a visible evidence of
the well directed activity of the owner.
Mr. Walker dates his residence in Iowa from 1901. He was born
in Menard county, Illinois, July 15, 1862, and was there reared to manhood
upon a farm, enjoying such educational advantages as were offered by
the common schools. When not busy with his text-books he assisted
in the work of the fields and remained with his father until after he
had attained his majority. He received no financial assistance
at the outset of his career, but placed his dependence upon industry
perseverance and determination and for about ten years he was in the
employ of others as a farm hand. On reaching his majority he returned
home and farmed with his father, the partnership between them continuing
for about five or six years.
On the 26th of March, 1890, Mr. Walker was united in marriage to
Miss Abbie H. Hornback who was born and reared in Menard county, Illinois,
and was a daughter of Captain Robert Hornback, an old soldier and one
of the representative citizens of Illinois. Following his marriage
Mr. Walker rented land and thus engaged in farming for a number of years.
In 1900 he came to Iowa and with the capital which he had saved from
his earnings he made investment in the farm on which he now resides,
becoming the owner of two hundred and eighty acres. In the spring
of 1901 he removed to this place and began its further cultivation and
improvements. He has repaired and remodeled the house and the
barn, has fenced the land and has secured the latest improved machinery
to facilitate the work of the fields. He now has a well developed
property and in connection with the raising of corn, wheat and other
cereals he also raises and feeds stock, handling cattle, sheep and hogs.
After a time he sold one hundred acres of his farm, which he had purchased
originally in connection with his brother-in-law. After they had
disposed of a portion of this (page 367) Mr. Walker purchased his brother-in-law's
interest and is now sole proprietor. He formerly fattened about
two carloads of cattle each year, but he is not carrying on his stock-raising
interests quite so extensively at the present time. However, his
business affairs are capably managed and have brought to him substantial
and gratifying success.
Mr. and Mrs. Walker are the parents of three children: Roy, who is
assisting his father in carrying on the home farm; and Catherine and
Arthur, who are also under the parental roof. The parents are
members of the Forest Grove Baptist church, are active workers in its
behalf and both are teachers in the Sunday school. Their lives
are upright and honorable in every relation, meriting the confidence
and good will which is so freely extended them.
Politically Mr. Walker has been a republican since age conferred
upon him the right of franchise, always voting for the candidates of
the party when national issues are involved but at local elections,
however, he frequently casts an independent ballot. He has been
elected and served as assessor of his township, although he was first
appointed to fill a vacancy while he later was called to the office
by popular suffrage. He has also been reelected and has now filled
the position for five years. He has also been school director
for a number of years and is now secretary of the board. Always
interested and active in support of his party he has been a delegate
to its county conventions and has done not a little in locally shaping
its policy. Mr. Walker is a member of the Independent Order of
Odd Fellows, with which he has been identified for a quarter of a century,
having joined the organization in Illinois. He was initiated on
attaining his majority and while living in Menard county he filled all
of the chairs in the local lodge. He is also connected with the
Modern Woodmen camp. A successful business man, well known as
a farmer and stock-raiser, his strict integrity and worth have given
him firm hold on the regard of his fellow townsmen.
J. F. WALKUP
J. F. Walkup is numbered among the large landowners and substantial
citizens of Taylor county, dating his residence here from 1870.
He was born in Greenbrier county, West Virginia, May 9, 1852, and was
there reared to the age of seventeen years, having been trained to the
duties of farm life. In 1870, being then a youth of eighteen,
he came to Taylor county, Iowa, where for six years during the summer
months he was employed at farm labor. For four years during the
winter months he continued his studies in the schools of this county,
his earlier education having been acquired in the schools of his native
county. After completing his education he was engaged for two
years during the winter season as a teacher but he continued to carry
on farm work during the summer months.
It was in 1880 that Mr. Walkup established a home of his own by his
marriage in Clayton township, this county, to Miss Mary Mehan, their
wedding ceremony being performed on the 9th of March of that year.
Mrs. Walkup was born and reared in this county. Following their
marriage they located on a farm of eighty acres in Clayton township,
which Mr. Walkup had previously bought. After about four years,
however, he disposed of that land and purchased one hundred and sixty
acres of his present home place in Gay township. This tract was
but partly cleared but in due time Mr. Walkup had the entire place under
cultivation. He further improved the farm by the erection of a
house and outbuildings, set out an orchard, built fences and made it
a valuable property. As time passed and the sale of his crops
brought him good financial returns, he invested his money in more land
from time to time until the home place now comprises two hundred and
forty acres. In 1908 he erected a modern and substantial farm
residence and added more outbuildings and his place today is one of
the best in his section of the county. In addition to carrying
on general farming he also gives attention to raising and feeding stock,
annually raising a carload of hogs. Mr. Walkup also owns another
farm of eighty acres, which he rents. It will thus be seen
that he made no mistake in locating in Taylor county during (page 590)
its pioneer period, for through his labors and his wise judgment he
has accumulated a good property.
The marriage of Mr. and Mrs. Walkup has been blessed with three sons
and two daughters, namely: Blanche, the wife of Lon Keith, a resident
of Canada; Maude, the wife of Earl Gordon, a resident farmer of Clayton
township; Roy C., who is on a ranch in New Mexico; and Glen and Frank,
who are still at home.
Politically Mr. Walkup is a democrat. For a number of years
he has served as township trustee, while he has also filled the office
of road supervisor and has been identified with the school board as
a director. Popular and public spirited, he has been chosen by
his party as a delegate to county conventions. His religious faith
is indicated by his membership in the Baptist church. Since coming
to the county almost four decades ago he has seen many changes as the
railroads have been built through this section, the telephone and telegraph
lines introduced and many other modern and needed improvements made.
He has been a leader in much of the work that has been accomplished
and takes a just pride in seeing Taylor county rank with the best sections
of the state of Iowa.
HENRI WALTER
The general farming and stock-raising interests of Taylor county
find a worthy and well-known representative in Henri Walter, who for
more than four decades has lived in this part of the state. For
a long period he was closely connected with the agricultural life and
still maintains a deep interest therein, although since 1902 he has
lived retired in Lenox, the success which he achieved (page 315) in
former years being sufficient to permit him now to rest from further
labor in the fields. His history, too, is an example of what can
be accomplished in this free land of ours, where labor is unhampered
by caste or class. He was born in Switzerland, October 14, 1844,
and was brought to the new world by his parents in 1853, the family
home being established in Monroe county, Ohio, where his father died,
the mother surviving him for some time.
Henri Walter was the youngest of a family of six sons and five daughters
and after coming to the United States remained on the farm with his
mother until he had attained his majority. He was married in Ohio,
in 1867, to Miss Louisa Schafroth, a native of Switzerland who came
to the United States in her early girlhood days. The young couple began
their domestic life upon a farm in Monroe county, Ohio, where they lived
for a year and then came to Adams county, Iowa, after which Mr. Walter
rented land and thus carried on farming for several years.
During that period he carefully saved his earnings and purchased forty
acres of raw land, where he soon had the breaking plow at work.
He thus opened up a farm four miles southeast of Corning and later bought
more land. He then sold the forty-acre tract and invested in one
hundred and sixty acres of raw prairie. This he converted into
productive fields and still owns the property, which is a valuable farm
southeast of Corning. As time passed and his financial resources
increased he added to his landed possessions from time to time and is
now the owner of four hundred acres in one farm in Adams county and
another farm of five hundred and sixty acres, both being well-improved
and valuable properties. His possessions are the visible evidence
of his life of well-directed energy and thrift. Year after year he carefully
tilled the soil and gathered rich crops as a reward for the labor he
bestowed upon his fields. In his pastures were found good grades
of stock which he raised and fed, selling at a good price on the market.
In 1902 he bought the farm whereon he now resides adjoining the corporation
limits of Lenox. This is a well-improved and valuable property.
He has built to and remodeled the house, has built a barn, and altogether
has made this an attractive place. He has likewise invested in
another farm of four hundred and eighty acres three miles east of Lenox
and he owns another tract of one hundred and sixty acres west of Lenox
and a quarter section in Adams county, in addition to the property previously
described. All of his land is well improved and he is today one
of the most prosperous farmers of this part of the state.
Unto Mr. and Mrs. Walter have been born eleven children, of whom
six sons and three daughters are yet living. Their first born,
Edmund, reached mature years and died about 1900. J. J. is a prominent
farmer and stock feeder of Lenox, mentioned elsewhere in this volume.
John is a resident farmer of Grove township. Henry A. follows
farming in Adams county. Andrew and Louis are also resident farmers
of Adams county. Ben assists in the operation of the home farm.
Ella is the wife of Simon Hufnagle, a farmer of Platt township.
Maleta is the wife of James Ely, who follows farming in Platt township;
and Delia is at home. They lost a daughter, Ida, at the age of
two years.
Mr. Walter votes with the republican ticket, but has never sought
nor desired office. His life has been an active and strenuous
one in which has been few leisure hours. As the years have gone
by, however, he has prospered in his undertakings and his success is
the direct result of his perseverance, diligence and careful investment.
His life record should serve to encourage and inspire others, showing
what may be accomplished if one has the will to persevere in a chosen
field of labor.
JACOB J. WALTER
Success, whether it is won in professional lines or through commercial,
industrial, or agricultural activities, always results from the same
causes. It is the legitimate outcome of close application and intelligently
directed energy. In this manner Jacob J. Walter has won his prosperity,
becoming known as a leading farmer and stock feeder of Taylor county,
where he owns and cultivates three hundred and sixty acres of rich an
arable land. His place, which adjoins the corporation limits of
Lenox, is a well improved and valuable farm, giving evidence in its
attractive appearance of the careful supervision of the owner.
Mr. Walter is a native son of Iowa and was born in Adams county,
November 11, 1870. His father is Henri Walter, of whom mention
is made elsewhere in this work.
Jacob J. Walter was reared to manhood in Adams county, spending his
youth on the home farm and in the common schools he mastered the elementary
branches of learning, but he is largely a self-educated man. He
remained with his father until his marriage, which important event in
his life was celebrated in Adams county on the 4th of March, 1904, the
lady of his choice being Miss Minnie Forence Brokaw, who was born in
Monroe county, Ohio, a daughter of James S. Brokaw, now of North Dakota.
After their marriage the young couple located on a farm two miles west
of Lenox and there carried on general agricultural pursuits for eight
years. They then removed to his father's place east of Lenox and
resided there until 1907, when Mr. Walter purchased their present home.
He has made many notable changes in the appearance of the place since
that time, has repaired the buildings, fenced the fields and tilled
the land, and in connection with general farming has successfully engaged
in raising, feeding and shipping stock. He fattens about twenty
carloads of cattle and hogs for the market each year, and in the year
1909 has sold over twenty carloads of his own fattening. He also
buys and ships some stock and is one of the foremost dealers in live
stock in this part of the county. He not only cultivates his own
place, (page 406) which comprises three hundred and sixty acres of rich
and productive land, but also farms his father's place of four hundred
acres. He is a stockholder and director in the Citizens Bank of
Lenox and is a business man of keen discernment and unfaltering enterprise
which has wrought his success along well defined lines of labor.
Unto Mr. and Mrs. Walter have been born two sons and two daughters,
Marie, Roland, Harry and Dorothy. The family are well known in
Lenox and this part of the county where they have a large circle of
warm friends. Mr. Walter has spent his entire life in Adams and
Taylor counties and has been closely associated with their growth and
development. He is now numbered among the most prosperous farmers
of the latter county and is known and esteemed for the success he has
achieved and for the honorable, straightforward business methods he
has ever followed in the conduct of his agricultural interests.
FIELDING B. WEBB
Fielding B. Webb, mastering the lessons of life day by day until
his post-graduate work in the school of experience has placed him with
the enterprising and successful business men of Bedford, is now engaged
in dealing in grain and coal. His trade, already large, is constantly
increasing, for his business methods are such as commend him to a liberal
and continued patronage. A native of Knox county, Illinois, he
was borne near Maquon, April 30, 1851, and is a representative in the
paternal line of an old southern family. His grandfather was Valentine
Webb, who removed from Virginia to Ohio and died in Franklin county
in the latter state when in middle life. He married a Miss Weeks,
who died when comparatively young. Their son, Luke Webb, father
of F. B. Webb, was born in Ohio and became a practicing dentist.
He married Melvina Allen, also a native of Ohio and a daughter of John
B. and Belinda (Bull) Allen, natives of Ohio and Maryland respectively.
The former was a cousin of Colonel Ethan Allen, who won undying fame
in command of the Green Mountain boys at the battle of Ticonderoga in
the Revolutionary war. John B. Allen was a farmer by occupation
and lived to be nearly eighty years of age. His wife died just
a few years before, when about seventy years of age. His last
days were spent in Knox county, Illinois, upon land which he had entered
from the government during pioneer times. In their family were
six sons and three daughters; Dixon; Melvin V., a practicing physician
of Chicago; Henry C.; Elias V.; Marion; Ethan; Melvina; Zemira; and
Elizabeth.
Of this number Melvina Allen became the wife of Luke Webb, who about
1848 removed westward to Illinois and for some years engaged in the
practice of dentistry in that state. In 1875, he arrived in Iowa
and his last days were spent in Bedford, where his death occurred in
1900, when he had reached the age of sixty-seven. He was a devoted
member of the Methodist church, to which his widow also belongs.
She still survives him and now lives with her daughter Belle at Pleasanton,
Kansas. In the family of this worthy couple were eight children,
four sons and four daughters: Henry C., a resident of Bedford; Fielding
B., of this review; John V. and William E., who likewise make their
home in Bedford; Martha, the wife of Horace Smith, of Dillon, Colorado;
Luella, the wife of Edwin Bundy, of Denver, Colorado; Belle C., the
wife of J. W. Langdon, of Pleasanton, Kansas; and Lizzie, the wife of
George W. Palmer, of Denver, Colorado.
Fielding B. Webb was reared in Knox county, Illinois, upon the home
farm, early becoming familiar with the duties and labors that fall to
the lot of the agriculturist. He attended the district schools
and lived at home until he had attained his majority. He then
began farming on his own account and remained a resident of Illinois
until 1875, when he came to Bedford. Here he learned the milling
business but in 1879 embarked in the grain and coal trade, in which
he has since continued, being one of the oldest merchants in this line
in southwestern Iowa. His reliable business methods, his promptness
in executing orders and his close conformity to a high standard of commercial
ethics have brought to him a constantly growing patronage, making him
one of the prosperous citizens of the community.
On the 28th of November, 1877, Mr. Webb was united in marriage to
Miss Sarah Elizabeth Child, a native of New York, as were her parents,
Erastus and Rachel (Foster) Child. They removed to Illinois in
1855, settling in Knox county, and there their two children reached
adult age. The younger daughter is Mrs. Julia Torrence, the wife
of Thomas Torrence of Monmouth, Illinois. The father is living
in Bedford at the very venerable age of ninety-two years, while the
mother passed away September 6, 1906, when about eighty-seven years
of age.
Mr. and Mrs. Webb have become the parents of one child, Grace I., who
is still under the parental roof. They hold membership in the
Methodist church, in which Mr. Webb is a trustee. He is numbered
among the exemplary members of Taylor Lodge, No. 156, A. F. &
A. M., Triangle Chapter, No. 68, R. A. M., Creston Commandery, No. 29,
K. T., and Moila Temple, A. A. O. N. M. S., of St. Joseph, Missouri.
His political support is given to the republican party, for he deems
its principles most conducive to good government. He does not
seek nor desire office as the reward for party fealty, preferring to
concentrate his energies upon business affairs rather than to fill political
positions. His life has been in a way quietly passed but the record
is one which may well be followed by those who seek advancement in accordance
with a high standard of business ethics, as his record proves that
success and an honored name may be won simultaneously.
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