GEORGE HOKE, deceased, was born near Cooperstown, Otsego Co., N. Y., July 29, 1817.
He was a son of Mathias Hoke, who was of German descent. His father was a farmer
and in connection ran a hotel at an early day. George's early life was spent in the
hotel and on the farm. He was married in Oswego County, N. Y., to Miss Lydia M.
Luddington, who was born in Herkimer County, N. Y., Jan. 16, 1818. She was the
daughter of Stephen R. and Catherine (Slayton) Luddington, her father a native of
Connecticut and her mother of Massachusetts. Her grandfather, Capt. Reuben Slayton,
served in the Revolutionary War, upon the staff of Gen. Washington. The first meeting
of her parents was accidental and savored a little of the romantic. Miss Slayton while
passing through a heavy piece of timber, got lost, and wandering around came to where
Mr. Luddington was chopping wood. She told him who she was and that she was lost, and
asked his assistance in piloting her out of the woods. Whether it was love at first
sight cannot be said, but it suffices to say that the young couple were subsequently
married, and became the parents of eleven children, ten of whom grew to be adults —
Franklin G., deceased; Stephen, deceased; Almira, Mason City, Iowa; Cornelius C.,
Ottawa, Canada; Cornelia, wife of Joseph Oshoru, Oswego County, N. Y.; Lydia M., widow
of our subject; Harriet, widow of David Ackley, Oswego County; Mary K., wife of Henry
Dyke, Charles City, Iowa; Archibald, attorney at law, Syracuse, N. Y.; George W.,
retired merchant, Oswego County, N. Y. Mr. and Mrs. Luddington are now deceased. They
were members of the Presbyterian Church and took a very active interest in all church
affairs. Mrs. Luddington was a woman of excellent qualities, doing the very best she
could in all positions in which she was placed, and at all times strove to promulgate
any means tending to good results. Whatever she did was done quietly, and in an
unostentatious manner; she was highly esteemed and beloved by all, and her death was
deeply mourned by fhe poor, to whom she was a kind and sincere friend.
Mr. and Mrs. Hoke came to Vinton in September, 1857, where he embarked in the drug
business. He subsequently became associated with E. H. Stedman in the grocery business,
under the firm name of Stedman & Hoke, and led an active business life until failing
health necessitated his retirement. He died at his residence in Vinton, Feb. 1, 1886.
He was a member of the I. O. O. F. and took an active interest in the order. Mr. and
Mrs. Hoke were the parents of one child — Eva Adel, who was born in the town of Paris,
Oswego Co., N. Y., and subsequently married Matthew Stedman. She died Aug. 26, 1864,
leaving many friends to mourn her loss. Mrs. Hoke was the first to engage in the
millinery trade in the city of Vinton.
Source Citation: "1887 Benton County, Iowa Biographies" [database online] Benton County IAGenWeb Project. <http://iagenweb.org/benton/>
Original data: "Portrait and Biographical Album of Benton County, Iowa." Chicago: Chapman Brothers, 1887, p. 198.
Transcribed by: Sue Soden. Submitted to the Benton County IAGenWeb Project on January 28th, 2009. Copyright © 2009 The IAGenWeb Project.