Orlando
D. Oathout is one of the enterprising farmers of
Monona Township, Clayton County, his home being on
section 8. He was born September 2, 1839, in Eaton
Township, Madison County, N.Y., where he received his
education. From boyhood he was a great student and came
to the west with his parents in 1855. He helped to
cultivate the farm on which his father settled, and in
the winter of 1860 began his work as a teacher in this
county. During the summer season he assisted his father
in the farm work and in the winter taught school until
1871, when he met with a most unfortunate accident, being
thrown off a mowing machine in front of the blade, which
cut off his right hand. Since that time he has
necessarily confined himself to teaching, having been in
charge of graded schools in Clayton, Luanna, Garnavillo,
North McGregor and Volga City.
The father of our subject was Solomon Hart Oathout, who
was born in 1809 in Madison County, N.Y. In early life he
followed his trade of cabinet-maker, later devoting
himself to agricultural pursuits. His ancestors on the
paternal side came from Holland, one of the name in
direct descent, Johannes Oathoudt, having settled in the
Mohawk Valley near Albany, N.Y. Following down the line
we find his son was Alexander, his grandson, John, and
his great-grandson, Solomon H., the father of our
subject. All of the family spelled the name as given
above until after marriage when the"d" was
omitted. Grandfather Oathout, whose birth occurred in the
Empire State, was a soldier in the War of 1812, and
Solomon H. was a Captain of a militia company in his
native state.
Our subject's mother was before her marriage Eliza
Abbott, her birth having occurred April 20, 1811, in
Madison County, N.Y., and her marriage January 1, 1834.
Her father removed to Medina, Ohio, about 1834, where he
made a permanent home and died. Solomon H. settled in
Eaton Township after his marriage on a farm of one
hundred acres, which he cultivated until 1855. In the
spring of that year he came to this county, making a
settlement o the farm now owned by our subject, which was
then all wild land, without fences nd with only an old
log house on the premises. he bought thirty-four acres,
paying for the same $340, and the family occupied the
little log cabin until 1871, when they built a frame
addition to it and later erected a new home on the site
of the old one. The father, who was amember of the
Congregational Church at Monona, was a Deacon in the same
and a member of the choir. He was a well read man, much
interested in astronomy and biography, and during the
last years of his life read the bible through every year.
His death occurred January 8, 1885, and his wife, who
survived hiim a few years, departed this life October 6,
1890. They are the parents of ten children, seven of whom
are living: Moses W., Orlando D., George W., Josephine
E., Alpha M., Albert C. and Alice. Henry C. died at about
the age of thirty-seven years, and George W. during the
late civil War was a member of Com;any K, First Iowa
Cavalry.
December 28, 1880, O.D. Oathout was married at Clayton to
Mary Ruegnitz, who was born in Germany. Her father is
Carl Ruegnitz, and her brother Charles is a resident of
Elkader. (See sketch elsewhere in tis volume) Mrs.
Oathout was born September 9, 1858, in Mecklenburg and
was educated in the schoools of Clayton. Later she became
a teacher, successfully conducting graded schools for
twelve terms. Our subject and his wife have had four
children, three of whom are living: namely: Anna L., Mary
E. and Martha. the home in which they dwell was built in
1872 by our subject's father.
Mr. Oathout has always been greatly interested in
educational work and was elected County Superintendent in
1881, serving as such for two years, and for twelve years
was Secretary of the County Normal Institute and has
occupied a similar position in the Division Society of
Monona. He and his wife are members of the Congregational
church of this place, in which he is a Deacon, and also a
worker in the Sunday-school. Politically he is a
Republican. Fraternally, he is a member of the Grand
Lodge of Iowa in the Ancient Order of United Workmen.
~source: Portrait
and Biographical Record of Dubuque, Jones and Clayton
Counties;Chicago: Chapman Pub. Co., 1894; pg. 405-406
-transcribed by Sharyl Ferrall
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