IAGenWeb Project - Clayton co.


George H. Cunningham

George H. Cunningham is numbered among the representative merchants and honored and influential citizens of the vigorous little village of Monona, where he is engaged in the hardware and implement business, with a large and well-equipped establishment that is at all times prepared to meet the demands of an extended and representative patronage. Mr. Cunningham is one of the well poised and substantial business men of the younger generation in his native county and consistently finds individual recognition in this publication.

He was born in Giard township, this county, on the 8th of September, 1888, and is a son of Isaac and Frances (Collier) Cunningham, both of whom were born in Holland. Isaac Cunningham came to the United States about the year 1866, and established his residence in the State of New York. About a decade later he came to Iowa and established his home in Clayton county, where he purchased a farm, in Giard township. There he continued his successful activities as an agriculturist for many years, and he and his wife now reside in the village of Monona, where he is living virtually retired and in the enjoyment of the goodly rewards of former years of earnest endeavor. He is a Republican in politics and continues to take a lively and discriminating interest in the issues and questions of the hour, with well fortified views concerning governmental and economic policies. He is a trustee of the local lodge of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows and both he and his wife are zealous members of the Methodist Episcopal church. They are numbered among the honored pioneer citizens of Clayton county and in the gracious environment of an attractive home and surrounded by a host of loyal friends, they may well feel that their lines are cast in pleasant places. Daniel H. the eldest of their children, is a prosperous farmer in Monona township; Mae F. is the wife of George Hazlett, of Giard township; William died at the age of 31 ; Carrie P. is the wife of James Campbell, of Colton, South Dakota; James is a resident of Monona; George H., the immediate subject of this review, was the next in order of birth; and Hazel remains at the parental home.

After completing the curriculum of the public schools of Monona, George H. Cunningham further fortified himself by an effective course in the Toland Business College, in the city of La Crosse, Wisconsin. He passed the ensuing four years as a bookkeeper in the city of St. Paul, Minnesota, and then became a traveling commercial salesman for the Huber & Furman Drug mills, of Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, with which concern he continued his successful work for four years.

In July, 1915, Mr. Cunningham returned to his native county and established his residence in Monona, where he purchased the hardware stock and business of the firm of Furguson & Licht. With marked circumspection and progressiveness he has since carried forward this enterprise, and his establishment is well stocked with heavy and shelf hardware, stoves, ranges, etc., with a well equipped department devoted to plumbing and heating appliances, for the installment of which he has the best of facilities, besides which there is special attention given to the sale of gas engines, windmills, and farm implements. Mr. Cunningham is primarily a business man and though he is emphatically progressive and loyal in his civic attitude and a staunch advocate of the policies and principles of the Republican party, he has manifested no ambition for public office of any kind. Both he and his wife hold membership in the Methodist Episcopal church of Monona and are popular factors in the representative social activities of the community.

On the 23d of August, 1910, was solemnized the marriage of Mr. Cunningham to Miss Jessie E. Foster, daughter of Bartley and Eva (Wheat) Foster, of St. Paul, Minnesota, and they have two children- Eva Francis, who was born August 10, 1911, and Daphne Lorayne, who was born April 4, 1915.

source: History of Clayton County, Iowa; From The Earliest Historical Times Down to the Present; by Realto E. Price, Vol. II, 1916; pg. 77-78

-OCR scanned by S. Ferrall

 

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