James Patrick Conway
James P. Conway
James Patrick Conway was born at Portage, Wyoming county, New
York, on January 3, 1861, within sling shot range of the then
highest railroad bridge in the world, which spanned the Genesee
river near the first of its triple precipices, which tumble over
three falls, the first ninety feet, the second sixty feet, and
the third one hundred feet. The wooden bridge was two hundred and
thirty-four feet high above the first cataract and is described
in volume 4, on page 328, Encyclopedia Britannica. Though young
when last the sound of the rushing waters echoed in his ears, he
still loves the sound of dashing waters and the wildest rushing
of the waves, undoubtedly inherited from the surroundings of his
birthplace. In October, 1862, he moved with his parents to
Meadville, Pennsylvania, and in September, 1864, to Lansing,
Iowa, where his father, Neal Cornelius Conway, and his mother,
Ellen Conway (whose maiden name was not changed by Marriage)
lived the remainder of their lives. Both of his parents were born
near Bangor, County Mayo, Ireland, his father on May 1, 1810, and
his mother on September 29, 1821. When famine and pestilence
swept Ireland in 1847, the landlords iron-clad leases to
secure the crop payment of each tenant in a barony, who was
compelled to guarantee the payment of all the tenants in the
barony, robbed his grandmother, or mothers mother, then a
widow with twelve children, out of a snug fortune to pay the
rents, not against any of her holdings but that of her neighbors.
The tailoring trade being out of commission, his father purchased
tickets for the family to America. They went to Liverpool and for
weeks waited for the vessel to be put in readiness for the
voyage. In the meantime his mothers mother became afflicted
with typhoid and had to remain and run through the siege of
twenty odd days. The vessel when ready left port for Halifax. His
mother and her two children remained to take care of her mother.
Two pennies were all that was left; these she invested and
reinvested on her return to her mothers home had a few
pounds of meal and twenty-one pennies. Two years later she and a
number of relatives left for America by way of New Orleans to see
a brother who was then located there. They were thirteen weeks
and three days at sea, during which time they encountered a three
days severe wind and thunder storm before the Christmas holidays.
The captain, officers and crew, except one man, abandoned the
ship and took refuge in its hold. The upper deck and masts were
swept into the sea. Still this man, who was the dethroned captain
of the vessel, the Argo, and lost his job by reason of running
his vessel on its former trip too fast to America, stuck to the
helm and begged his sixty brave sailors to come to
his aid, and the sound of his voice through the hatchway rang in
the ears of all his hearers until the date of their death. Mrs.
Mary Ryder, wife of P. F. Ryder, recorder of Allamakee county,
Iowa, in the 60s, never forgot the sound of his voice
although she was but a little child when she heard it. No sailor
responded. On Christmas evening this brave soul dropped dead at
the helm, and when the storm abated the cowardly captain and his
crew sneaked from under the berths and heaved him overboard as a
sacrifice to the mad Atlantic. The vessel then in mid ocean had
been driven below the equator, and after some repairs slowly
sailed northward, landing at Jamaica, Cuba, and finally reached
New Orleans at a time when the scourge of cholera was then
raging. On reaching the home of their brother they found that he
had died the night before of cholera and was then being buried.
The cholera stuck the Conways and their relatives and out of
forty-seven only six survived. These after many trials and
hardships reached their relatives and enjoyed long and useful
lives. His father and mother celebrated their golden wedding
anniversary October 28, 1889, when all the family assembled-their
last meeting. They would have celebrated their sixtieth
anniversary but for the illness of his father. His father died
December 8, 1899, at the age of eighty-nine years. His mother
died March 6, 1905, at the age of eighty-four years. They raised
a family of twelve children, five of whom survived them. A
daughter, Mrs. Ryder, who thereafter with her two sons moved to a
claim near Chinook, Montana, was murdered in daylight by being
shot through a window in her home by a vagabond trapper on May 8,
1912. Another daughter is Mrs. Ellen Marvin, of Zumbrota,
Minnesota. J. W. Conway is editor of the Champion, of Norton,
Kansas. D. M. Conway is of the same place and T. P. Conway, of
Lansing, Iowa.
J. P. Conway attributes his education to his mother, who taught
him his letters from there old stove, No. 8, manufactured by
George Francis Filly, of St. Louis, Missouri, which practically
contained all the letters of the alphabet. During the winter
months he attended the rural school of his district and in summer
operated the farm, and later attended Professor Laurens Seminary
at Waukon, Iowa, and at the age of seventeen commenced teaching
school at Barbers mills, Minnesota. In the winter
thereafter he continued teaching at the Four Mile House, Eitzen,
Minnesota; Van Cooley, Village Creek, Lansing, Calhoun, and as
principal of the New Albin schools until 1891, when he entered
the law department of the University of the State of Wisconsin at
Madison, where he graduated in June, 1893, as Bachelor of Laws.
The latter part of June, 1893, after visiting the Worlds
Fair at Chicago, he arrived home and before he could salute his
parents was employed and engaged in a law suit at the city hall,
and he says from that moment he has had plenty of legal work to
do. He was city solicitor for eight years, and at the last city
election on March 31, 1913, was without opposition elected mayor
of the city of Lansing, Iowa. When the Peoples State Bank was
organized in 1911 he could have had any office he desired, but
would not accept anything except that of director. He has been a
lifelong democrat, tolerant in his views with the good of every
party, and tells the good deeds and acts which they and their
leaders have done, and scathes with scorn and derision the evils
which some have inflicted upon the people. He says he has no
political ambitions, but he has told a few of his close friends
that when his financial condition will permit him and he has the
time to spare, that no office from the president down will be too
great or small for him to fill if he can do any good for the
people and his country. Jim was born and raised a Catholic. He
tells us that he was baptized three times. Only one
counted, of course, and which one he does not remember. When
born, Dr. Ray, then a postgraduate, from Paris, France,
pronounced him dead and Mrs. Rattican -the untrained nurse- a
good old neighbor- was on duty. While the mother lay unconscious
after the twelve-pounder, the nurse assisted by the father went
through the formalities of baptizing. When the mother aroused and
felt for the child-not finding it she wanted to know what had
become of it. On looking over the foot of the bed she spied the
white garments around the child whom they told her was dead. She
sprang from her bed, took the infant from its shrouds-told the
doctor it was not dead-blew in its ears and mouth, attempting
respiration, rubbed and bathed it in liquor, and in about
one-half hour the first pulse was noticed by a quiver of the lips
and opening of the mouth. His mother baptized him, and after that
Father Dolan baptized him. All three are now dead, and Jim says
that the three stuck and did not wash off.
J. P. Conway was married to Ellen McCafferty, at Lansing, on May
20, 1890. She was the youngest daughter of Anthony and Mary
McCaffery, (whose maiden nave was not changed by her marriage)
both born in County Donegal, Ireland, who for many years lived at
the Four Mile House, where many a weary traveler
found rest, refreshment and shelter in the early 60s, when
grain was hauled to Lansing from Decorah, Waukon, Prosper, Spring
Grove, and Caledonia. Her mother died May 27, 1882, and her
father died May 27, 1886, leaving four daughters: Mrs. Conway;
Miss Rosa McCafferty; Mrs. Eunice Fleming, now of Laurel,
Nebraska; and Mary McCafferty, now Sister Seraphia, of La Crosse,
Wisconsin; and one son, Anthony J. McCafferty, who died while
mayor of the city of Lansing, on September 2, 1909.
Two children were born to Mr. And Mrs. Conway, a daughter on
August 4, 1891, who after a few months a life passed out through
the veil of eternity to join the numberless in the great Beyond;
and a son, William James, who was born October 25, 1896.
-source: Past & Present of Allamakee County; by
Ellery M. Hancock; S. J. Clarke Pub. Co.; 1913
-transcribed by Diana Diedrich
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