History of Taylor County, Iowa: from the earliest
historic times to 1910 by Frank E. Crosson. Chicago, The S.J.
Clarke Publishing Co. 1910
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(biographicals transcribed by Linda Kestner: lfkestner3@msn.com)
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REV. ISAAC E. WEBB
Rev. Isaac E. Webb, a resident farmer of Dallas township, his home
being near New Market, is also well known as a minister of the church
of the Brethren and one whose influence has been a potent factor for good
in the moral as well as the material development of the community.
His home farm comprises two hundred acres of land and in its development
and improvement he displays good business ability and a spirit of undaunted
enterprise. A native of Illinois, he was born November 19, 1840,
and is a son of Robert H. and Elizabeth (Lollar) Webb. His paternal
grandparents were William and Elizabeth Webb, natives of Tennessee and
their family numbered the following children: Robert, William, John, Isaac,
Ibby, Annie and Fannie. The maternal grandparents of Rev. Webb were
Mr. and Mrs. D. Lollar, who had three children: Elizabeth, Elkanah and
China.
Robert H. Webb was born in Tennessee, on the 4th of November, 1812,
and having arrived at years of maturity wedded Elizabeth Lollar, whose
birth occurred in the same state in 1815. After living for some
time in Illinois, they removed to Iowa in October, 1842, taking up their
abode in Keokuk county among its early pioneer residents. Their
children were: Isaac E., William, James, John, Samuel Houston, Jacob,
Jane, Susan and Fannie.
Isaac E. Webb was not quite two years of age at the time of the removal
of the family from Illinois to Iowa, so that his boyhood and youth were
passed in Keokuk county amid the wild scenes and environment of pioneer
life. He has always been a farmer and for twenty years has been
a resident of Taylor county, where his time and energies have been devoted
to general agricultural pursuits. He has seen the land treble in
value since he came to this county and the prices continually advancing.
His own holdings comprise two hundred acres in Dallas township and the
soil, which is naturally rich and fertile, responds readily to the care
and labor which he bestows upon it so that he annually harvests good crops.
In all of his business dealings he is thoroughly reliable and his success
is well merited.
Rev. Webb is also widely known in connection with the church of the
Brethren, in which he is a minister. For fourteen years he has been
thus connected with the church as a minister of the second degree and
has labored throughout the (page 278) district of Iowa. He was the
first member of the denomination in Taylor county and was largely instrumental
in organizing the church to which he belongs and which was formed in 1897.
He held meetings in the schoolhouses for several years before a house
of worship was bought. There are now about fifteen members constituting
a progressive little flock whose influence is widely felt as a moral force
in the community.
Mr. Webb was married in April, 1866, to Miss Hannah Wortman, who was
born in Iowa in 1847, and is a daughter of George and Tina (Scott) Wortman
and a granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. David Wortman. Her parents had
four children: Harry H., James, William and Louisa. Unto Mr. and
Mrs. Webb have been born ten children: Louisa, Nora, Lora, Ida, Minnie,
John, Elmer, George, Walter and Frank. The daughters are now all
married.
Mr. Webb gives his political allegiance to the democracy while his
business enterprise is devoted to farming but the motive power of his
life is found in his belief in Christianity which is embraced in tangible
measure in his efforts in behalf of the church. His work in this
connection has been far-reaching and beneficial and moreover his life
record proves that success and an honorable name may be won simultaneously.
SIDNEY P. WEBB
Sidney P. Webb, one of the prosperous merchants and public-spirited
citizens of Bedford, was born near this city, February 3, 1878, and his
entire life has been spent here. He is a son of Henry and Agnes
(Smith) Webb, whose sketch appears elsewhere in this volume. He
acquired his education in the public schools of Bedford, passing through
consecutive grades until he completed the high-school course. After
leaving school he engaged in various occupations until (page 610) 1902,
in which year, in partnership with George McGinnis, he bought out the
grocery business of M. F. Fowler, and later he purchased his partner's
interest, becoming sole proprietor of the store, which he conducted until
February 1, 1909. Selling his grocery, he then purchased the Fair
store of J. E. Moody and now handles all kinds of merchandise, carrying
a large and complete stock.
Mr. Webb has also won prominence through his military career, having
served in the Philippines as a member of Company I, Fifty-first Iowa Volunteer
Infantry. He was ninety-five days on the transport Pennsylvania
en route to the islands. Enlisting as a private, he was later promoted
to corporal and after his return home was elected captain of the National
Guards.
On the 25th of June, 1905, Mr. Webb was united in marriage to Miss
Mary Bordner, a native of Taylor county and a daughter of Al and Harriet
(Scribner) Bordner. They have one child, a daughter, Marjorie.
The parents are members of the Methodist Episcopal church and Mr. Webb
belongs to Bedford Lodge, No. 101, K. P. He gives his political
allegiance to the republican arty, and his fellow citizens, recognizing
his sterling worth, have elected him to the position of city treasurer,
the duties of which office he is performing efficiently and faithfully.
Deeply interested in all that pertains to the welfare and prosperity of
the city, Mr. Webb exerts his influence toward the furtherance of all
measures that tend to promote the improvement, progress and upbuilding
of the community. He holds an enviable place in the regard and esteem
of all with whom he has come in contact.
JOEL WEEKS
Joel Weeks, who since 1892 has lived retired in Bedford, was in former
years actively and successfully identified with the agricultural interests
of Taylor county. His birth occurred in Adams county, Ohio, on the
8th of February, 1851, his parents being Ezekiel and Sarah (Coppel) Weeks,
the former a native of Cape May, New Jersey, and the latter of Adams county,
Ohio. The paternal grandfather, Vincent Weeks, likewise a native
of New Jersey, was of English (page 478) and German descent. He
followed general farming throughout his active business career and passed
away in Adams county, Ohio, when about eighty years of age. His
wife, who bore the maiden name of Rebecca Risley, also attained a ripe
old age. This worthy couple reared a family of seven sons, namely:
Ezekiel, John, Risley, Joel, James, Richard and Job. Daniel Coppel,
the maternal grandfather of our subject, was born in Pennsylvania and
came of German lineage. He did active duty as a soldier in the War
of 1812 and was a farmer by occupation, meeting with a creditable measure
of success in his undertakings. He became an early settler of Adams
county, Ohio, and there continued to reside until he passed away at the
age of eighty-four years, at Havana, Mason county, Illinois. His
wife had also attained an advanced age at the time of her demise and they
reared a family of eight children, three sons and five daughters, as follows:
John; Henry; Fletcher; Sarah, who gave her hand in marriage to Ezekiel
Weeks; Hannah, who became the wife of Frank Woods; Dorcas, the wife of
William Robinson; Jane, who became the wife of Charles Rogers; and Nancy,
the wife of William Naylor.
Ezekiel Weeks, the father of Joel Weeks, was a miller by trade and
on leaving his native state took up his abode in Ohio, passing away on
his farm near Bentonville, Adams county, that state, as the age of forty-one
years. His wife, long surviving him, came to Taylor county, Iowa,
in 1871, locating in Holt township, where she made her home until a short
time prior to her death. Her demise occurred in Lenox on the 25th
of December, 1905, and had she survived for but six days longer she would
have lived to celebrate her ninety-third birthday. Like her husband,
she was a devoted and faithful member of the Methodist church and was
highly esteemed for her many good traits of heart and mind, winning the
kindly regard and friendship of all with whom she came in contact. She
was the mother of two children: Joel, of this review; and Henry, who died
at the age of eleven years.
Joel Weeks spent the first seventeen years of his life in the state
of his nativity, being reared on the home farm and obtaining his education
in the district schools. Removing to Havana, Mason county, Illinois,
he there continued to reside until 1871, when he came to Taylor county,
Iowa, settling in Holt township, where he purchased a farm of eighty-six
acres. To the cultivation and improvement of that property he devoted
his time and energies until 1876, when he took up his abode on a farm
of one hundred and ten acres in Marshal township. There he energetically
and industriously carried on agricultural pursuits for a number of years,
winning a gratifying and well-deserved measure of prosperity by reason
of his untiring labor and capable management. In 1892, having accumulated
a handsome competence, he put aside the active work of the fields and
purchased a fine home in Bedford, where he has since lived retired in
the enjoyment of the fruits of his former toil. In addition to his
farm of one hundred and ten acres in Marshall township he likewise owns
a tract of one hundred and sixty acres in Cheyenne county, Kansas, and
is widely recognized as a most substantial, progressive and representative
citizen of the community.
On the 16th of December, 1874, Mr. Weeks was united in marriage to
Miss Almia Gordon, a daughter of Uriah and Leva Ann (Babbington) Gordon,
who were natives of Pennsylvania but became early settlers of Mason county,
Illinois (page 479). Uriah Gordon was called to his final rest in
1863, when he had attained the age of fifty-three years, while his wife,
who long survived him, passed away in 1899 at the age of seventy-eight
years. Their family numbered five children: George, a resident of
Havana, Illinois; Albert, also living at that place; Mrs. Weeks; Charlotte,
the deceased wife of Daniel McClung; and Ann Maria, who was seventeen
years of age when called to the home beyond. Mrs. Weeks was
born, reared and married on the same farm in Mason county, Illinois, and
still owns an interest in the property. Unto Mr. and Mrs. Weeks
were born two sons, George and Horace, whom they lost at the same time
by drowning. Their sudden and tragic end came as a deep and almost
irreparable blow to the parents.
Since age conferred upon him the right of franchise Mr. Weeks has cast
his ballot in support of the men and measures of the democracy.
In religious faith he is a Methodist and both he and his wife are consistent
members of the church of that denomination in Bedford. The period
of their residence in this county covers more than a third of a century
and they are widely and favorably known within its borders, the circle
of their friends being almost coextensive with the circle of their acquaintances.
S. J. WENTZEL
S. J. Wentzel, who for almost two decades has been a prominent and
successful representative of agricultural interests in Taylor county,
was born in Perry county, Pennsylvania, on the 2d of November, 1843.
He is a son of Daniel and Catharine (Campbell) Wentzel, natives of Northumberland
county, Pennsylvania, where they were reared and married. His paternal
great-grandfather fought for American independence during the Revolutionary
war, while his grandfather, Daniel Wentzel, was a soldier of the war of
1812. His father, who was a stone-cutter by trade, followed that
occupation in Pennsylvania for about thirty-six years and then settled
upon a farm in Perry county, that state, where his remaining days were
spent. His family consisted of five sons and seven daughters, all
of whom reached mature years and reared families of their own, and were
all church members. Of this number four sons and four daughters
still survive.
In the common schools of the Keystone State S. J. Wentzel acquired
his education and on his father's farm he was reared to manhood, assisting
his father in the work of the fields until twenty years of age.
Then imbued with a spirit (page 641) of patriotism, on the 2d of September,
1864, he enlisted for three years' service in the Civil war, becoming
a member of Company F, Two Hundred and Eighth Pennsylvania Volunteer Infantry.
The regiment joined the Army of the Potomac and his first duty was on
the picket line. Later, however, he participated in many important
engagements, including the battles of Appomattox, Peach Orchard, Bermuda
Hundred, Fort Steadman, Petersburg, Five Forks or Hatchers Run.
He was a member of a brigade detailed to tear up the railroads, during
which time he took part in several skirmishes and was also one of twenty
men detailed as a guard to escort General Fitzhugh Lee, with some twenty
soldiers, to the Union lines. He later guarded twenty Confederate
soldiers after Lee's surrender, keeping them in a building until morning,
when they were released. He continued to serve with his regiment
until the close of the war and was then mustered out at Alexandria.
Later he marched to Washington, D. C., where he participated in the grand
review, and was then honorably discharged at Harrisburg on the 17th of
June, 1865. Throughout his entire service he lost no time through
sickness or other causes, was always on duty and was loyal and brave
in his defense of the old flag and the cause which it represented.
When the country no longer needed his services, Mr. Wentzel returned
home, where he assisted in the work of the farm and remained until after
the fall crops were harvested. He then went to the pineries, where
he worked in the timber through the following winter, and when spring
came he boarded a canalboat at Williamsport and went to Baltimore.
He made four trips to Key West, two from Baltimore and two from Fortress
Monroe. Upon his return to his native state, having located in the
county in 1857. He was at that time a young man in 1870 that came
west, locating in Knox County, Illinois, where he obtained employment
on a farm, working by the month for over a year. In 1872 in that
county, he was united in marriage to Miss Angeline Cline, a native of
Pennsylvania, where she was reared and educated. They began their
domestic life upon a rented farm which Mr. Wentzel continued to operate
for several years. He then removed to Iowa and took up his abode
upon a farm which he had previously purchased in Taylor county.
This farm, consisting of one hundred and twenty acres on section
26, Grant township, was but partially improved when it came into his possession,
but he immediately set about bringing his fields under a high state of
cultivation. He erected a comfortable residence and a good, substantial
barn, and has introduced upon the place various improvements which serve
to make it one of the valuable and desirable properties of the township.
He has made a close study of agriculture and is methodical, systematic
and progressive, so that he is numbered among the substantial and successful
farmers of his section of the county. In connection with his farming
he engages in stock raising and this branch of his business is proving
a very gratifying source of income.
As the years have come and gone the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wentzel has
been blessed with six children, five of whom are now living, namely: Charles
Ira, who follows the occupation of farming; David Leroy, who is married
and operates a farm in Platte township, Taylor county; Laura May, the
wife of F. L. Rood, of Clearfield, Iowa; Lydia Alice, who married Ed Grant
of Northville, South Dakota; and Lucinda Adell, the wife of George Crane,
of Ringgold county, Iowa. Mary F. passed away when three years of
age.
Mr. and Mrs. Wentzel are members of the United Presbyterian church
of Clearfield and are people of the highest personal worth, occupying
an enviable place in the social circles of the community in which they
reside. Politically Mr. Wentzel is a democrat although he cast his
first vote for Abraham Lincoln in 1864 while serving in the army.
He also supported James A. Garfield, and it is a coincidence that both
candidates were elected on his birthday and both were assassinated.
He served as township trustee three or four different terms and was sent
as delegate to various county conventions. His friends, and they
are many, know him to be a man of high principles and stalwart purposes,
and throughout the community in which he resides he commands the respect
and confidence of those with whom he has come in contact.
A. T. WEST, M. D.
Prominent among the medical practitioners of Iowa and Taylor county
may be mentioned Dr. A. T. West, who has practiced his profession in Conway
for the past thirty-two years, and he is therefore widely and favorable
known in this section of the state. He is a native son of this state,
his birth having occurred in Knoxville, on the 9th of April, 1854.
He was reared in the place of his nativity and there acquired his literary
education, completing his studies in Knoxville Academy when a youth of
eighteen years. The medical profession appealing strongly to him,
to that end he entered Bennett Eclectic Medical College at Chicago, being
graduated from that institution in May, 1874. He then located for
practice in Derby, Iowa, where he continued three years, but believing
that Conway offered much better opportunities for his practice, he then
removed to this place and has here continued to the present time,
covering a period of about thirty-two years. At that time this
place was a mere hamlet but in the years that have since come and
gone it has grown to an enterprising and thriving little city and with
the increase in population Dr. West's practice has likewise increased,
so that he now has a very large and lucrative patronage. His services,
however, are not only confined to this city but are in demand over a large
area of country and he has come to be the loved family physician in numerous
households in this section While the Doctor does a general practice,
he makes a specialty of diseases of the lungs, throat and heart.
He owns his own office, which is a neat structure of brick and also has
erected a fine residence, his being one of the commodious and substantial
homes of this city. In addition to his practice the Doctor is also interested
in other industries, one of which is a livery business, which he has conducted
with the assistance of others, for the past eighteen years and in this
he has been very successful. He is also a stockholder and a director
of the Conway Savings Bank and owns a fine farm of one hundred and sixty
acres, a mile east of Conway, which brings him a good rental.
Dr. West was married in Derby, Iowa, October 17, 1876, the lady of
his choice being Miss Emma Oehlman, who was born and reared there.
Their marriage has been blessed with two daughters, but Frances died at
the age of seventeen years. The surviving daughter is Anna, now
the wife of Nolan Edwards, a resident of Macon, Missouri.
Politically a republican, the Doctor casts an independent ballot at
local elections, while his fraternal relations are with the Odd Fellows.
He first joined (page 522) the lodge at Derby, Iowa, but now holds membership
in the lodge at Conway, in which he has served through all the chairs
and is now past grand. He has committed to memory the entire ritual
of this organization. Both he and his wife are members of the Rebekah
lodge and in this he has also served through the chairs and is now past
grand and also for several years served as district deputy. Mrs.
West has been sent as a delegate to the grand assembly on several occasions.
He is also equally prominent in the Modern Woodmen order, and the Brotherhood
of American Yeoman, having served as correspondent in the latter for twelve
years. Mrs. West is a member of the Methodist Episcopal church.
Interested in all public movements and measures, Dr. West served as
treasurer of the town board for six years, in which connection he rendered
honest and efficient service. Dr. West, however, does not neglect
his professional duties but keeps in close touch with the advancement
that is being made in this direction through his membership in the Southwestern
Iowa Medical Society and in the Taylor County Medical Society.
He may well be termed a pioneer physician of Conway and during the thirty-two
years in which he has practiced here he has adhered to a high standard
of professional ethics, which has won him the unqualified regard of his
fellow practitioners, while the skill and ability which he has displayed
has gained him a liberal patronage from the general public. And
not only has he held to high ideals in his profession but as well in citizenship
and in social relations, thus commanding the warm esteem and genuine admiration
of all with whom he comes in contact.
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