Henry Webb
Henry Webb and Rozilla (Dresser) Webb
Henry Webb will long be remembered as one of the most successful
farmers Allamakee county has known and as a man of remarkable
ability whose judgment was seldom at fault and whose fidelity to
trust and sincerity in anything which he undertook were never
questioned. For forty-one years he was a resident of this section
of Iowa and here he spent and active, useful and honorable life,
terminating in his death on the 27th of March, 1905. He was born
in Livingston, New York, September 26, 1839, and was a son of
John and Elizabeth (Webb) Webb, of Irish descent, who resided on
a farm near Milwaukee, Wisconsin, for a number of years. In the
fall of 1864 they came to Iowa and in this state spent the
remainder of their lives. The father was born in 1803 and died in
1870, while the mother was born in 1797 and died in 1887. Henry
Webb acquired his education in the public schools of Wisconsin
and there grew to manhood. In the spring of 1864 he came to Iowa,
settling near Postville, where he obtained a position in a grain
elevator but was later employed at the depot. In the year of his
arrival here he was married and he made his home with his wife's
parents until the following spring, when he rented a farm one
mile east of Postville, upon which he continued to reside for one
year. At the end of that time he purchased the property, which
comprised one hundred and twenty acres, and upon this he carried
forward the work of cultivation for ten years finally selling the
farm and buying another, upon which his widow now resides. Mr.
Webb turned his attention with characteristic energy to the
improvement and development of his land, carrying on the work
along progressive and modern lines, success steadily rewarding
his well directed labor. The property became a valuable one,
equipped with fine buildings and labor saving machinery and
reflecting everywhere the care and supervision of a practical and
able agriculturist. Mr. Webb built his home in the midst of a
beautiful evergreen grove and here he resided until his death,
which occurred March 27, 1905.
On the 29th of November, 1864, Mr. Webb was united in marriage to
Miss Rozilla Dresser, who was born in Champaign county, Ohio, on
the 18th of February, 1845. She is a daughter of Calvin and
Sallie (Hawkins) Dresser, the former a native of Canada and the
latter of New Hampshire. The father, who spent his entire active
life engaged in farming, remained a resident of Ohio, until 1855,
when he located on a farm just north of Postville, which he
cleared and improved, developing and excellent and valuable farm.
There he died May 14, 1892, when he was seventy-eight years of
age. His wife survived him only a short time, dying when she was
eighty-one. In their family were twelve children, of whom Mrs.
Webb was the eighth in order of birth. Mr. and Mrs. Webb became
the parents of six children: Lucy Augusta, who was born July 16,
1869, and married C.P. Smith, a farmer living in the vicinity of
Postville; Melissa Arvilla, who was born on the 1st of December,
1870, and is now the wife of Jean Owen, a farmer in Winneshiek
county; Ida Jane, whose birth occurred on the 29th of November,
1872, and who became the wife of John Staadt, engaged in farming
near Ottawa, Kansas; Herman D., who was born January 14, 1875,
and resides at home; Bertha May, who was born July 3, 1877, and
married Adolph Thias, a clerk in Portland, Oregon; and Eva
Blanche, who was born April 24, 1879, and married George Fay, a
druggist in Postville. Since the death of her husband Mrs. Webb
has added forty acres to the homestead and manages the property
in an able and successful manner. She is a woman of high ideals
and lovable character and holds the respect, confidence and high
regard of all with whom she comes in contact.
Mr. Webb gave his allegiance to the republican party but never
desired political honors, his interests centering in his home and
his farming operations. He was a kind parent, a true friend and
firm upholder of the law, a citizen whose work made a lasting
impression upon those with whom he came into contact and upon the
region where he made his home.
pgs 282-283
-transcribed by Cathy Joynt-Labath
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