Person:John Butler (161)

Watchers
Col. John Butler
m. 10 Mar 1796
  1. Col. John Butler1802 - 1881
  2. Syms Butler1807 -
  3. Mary Butler1808 -
  4. Eli Butler1812 -
  5. William Henry Harrison Butler1813 -
  6. Thomas Butler1818 -
  • HCol. John Butler1802 - 1881
  • WMary Adney1804 - 1875
m. 26 Apr 1822
  1. Rosa M. Butler1830 -
Facts and Events
Name Col. John Butler
Gender Male
Birth[1] 20 Jul 1802 Greenbrier County, Virginia
Marriage 26 Apr 1822 to Mary Adney
Death[1] 18 May 1881 Avon, Fulton County, Illinois
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 Ancestry.com. Public Member Trees: (Note: not considered a reliable primary source).
  2.   Bateman, Newton, and Paul Selby. Historical encyclopedia of Illinois - DuPage. (Chicago [Illinois]: Munsell Pub. Co., 1913).

    WOODS, EBENEZER W. well-known farmer and stock-raiser and substantial citizen of Greenbush Township, Warren County, was born in Sullivan, Madison County, N. Y., September 16, 1819, the son of Asa and Huldah (Wilford) Woods, and a grandson of Samuel Woods. His maternal grandparents were John and Ann (Blackstone) Wilford. His father was born in Salem, Mass., January 2, 1791; his mother in New Haven County, Conn., and her father in the same State. Ebenezer W. Woods received his education in the district school and was married January 6, 1852, in Greenbush Township, too Rosa M. Butler, by whom he has had eight children. Mrs. Woods was born in Gallia County, Ohio, January 6, 1830, and was the daughter of Col. John and Mary (Adney) Butler. both natives of what is now Greenbrier County, W. Va., where he was born July 20, 1802, and she November 12, 1804. They were married April 26, 1822. In October, 1839, they removed West, and settled near Greenbush. Warren County. He became a very extensive farmer and land-owner, at one time being the proprietor of 1,300 acres of land. His last years were spent at Avon, where he was killed by being run over by a team. During the civil war he was Colonel of the Eighty-fourth Regiment Illinois Volunteer Infantry, doing valuable service in Indiana and Ohio. His father built Fort Recovery for General Wayne. In 1835 Ira Woods, a brother of Asa Woods, came too Fulton County and bought a tract of land for the family, on part of which Avon has since been established, too which Asa Woods brought his family too make a home the following year. This land cost the Woods brothers a dollar and a quarter an acre, and is now among the most valuable farming lands in the State. Asa Woods died, August 4, 1854; and his wife, March 27, 1867. Ebenezer Woods, who was eighteen years old at the time his parents sought their western home, accompanied them on the slow and toilsome journey, that required forty-two days for its completion. He learned the carpenter trade in 1842, but has been a farmer all his life, beginning with the cultivation of a portion of the original tract his father and uncle had bought, purchasing at a later period 140 acres in Section 2, and is at the present time an extensive land-owner. His has been an industrious and useful life, in which he long served the public as a School Director. Of his marriage with Rosa M. Butler were born children: Ezra, Willis R., Ellen. John A., Edwin Stanton, Sarah B., Minnie C. and Alice, who is dead.

    http://www.usgennet.org/usa/il/county/warren/1903_his_5_war.htm