Person:George Nebeker (4)

Watchers
George Nebeker
m. 4 Jan 1801
  1. John Nebeker1806 - 1863
  2. Mary Ann Nebeker1808 - 1864
  3. Charlotte Nebeker1809 - 1835
  4. Richard Morris Nebeker1811 - 1893
  5. George Nebeker1813 - 1890
  6. Nancy Ann Nebeker1816 - 1897
  7. Elizabeth Nebeker1816 - 1897
  8. Rev. Lucas Nebeker, Jr1819 - 1888
  9. Hannah Nebeker1821 - 1904
  • HGeorge Nebeker1813 - 1890
  • WMary Steely1814 - 1870
m. 27 Dec 1832
  1. Ruben S. Nebeker1834 - 1914
  2. Enos Nebeker1836 - 1913
  3. Alonzo Nebeker1838 - 1882
  4. Lucas Nebeker1845 - 1935
  5. Hannah Nebeker1848 - 1873
  6. Charlotte Nebeker1851 - 1851
  7. Elizabeth J. 'Lizzy' Nebeker1853 - 1946
m. 15 Nov 1871
Facts and Events
Name[1] George Nebeker
Gender Male
Birth[2][3] 20 Aug 1813 Circleville, Pickaway County, Ohio
Marriage 27 Dec 1832 Fountain County, Indiana(his 1st wife; 4 sons, 2 daus)
to Mary Steely
Residence[2] From 1863 to 1865 Evanston, IndianaMoved because of his job, moved back after the war.
Occupation[2] 1867 Covington, Fountain County, IndianaPresident, First National Bank of Attica; president, Farmers' Bank of Covington. director of Indianapolis, Bloomington & Western Railroad.
Marriage 15 Nov 1871 Fountain County?, Indiana(his 2nd wife, her 2nd husband; resident of Terre Haute at time of marriage)
to Louisa _____
Death[3] 18 Oct 1890 Covington, Fountain County, Indiana
Burial[3] Bend Cemetery, Covington, Fountain, Indiana, United States

Appointed first tax collector in the county; appointed by the president as one of three commissioners of the Board of Enrollment for his district.

References
  1. Beckwith, Hiram Williams; P. S Kennedy; and T. F. (Thomas F.) Davidson. History of Fountain County: together with historic notes on the Wabash Valley, gleaned from early authors, old maps and manuscripts, private and official correspondence, and other authentic sources. (Tucson, Arizona: W.C. Cox Co., 1974)
    p. 28-29.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Beckwith, Hiram Williams; P. S Kennedy; and T. F. (Thomas F.) Davidson. History of Fountain County: together with historic notes on the Wabash Valley, gleaned from early authors, old maps and manuscripts, private and official correspondence, and other authentic sources. (Tucson, Arizona: W.C. Cox Co., 1974)
    p. 130-31, 1850.

    One of a party of four men who built the first bridge across the Wabash.

  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Find A Grave.

    George Nebeker
    Birth: Aug. 20, 1813 - Pickaway County, Ohio, USA
    Death: Oct. 16, 1890 - Fountain County, Indiana, USA

    "Geo. Nebeker, banker, Covington. Much of the improvement and prosperity of Fountain county is due to the energy, enterprise and perseverance of a few of the early pioneers, and there were none, probably, who took a more active part in the building up of all institutions pertaining to the general welfare of the pioneers than Mr. Lucas Nebeker, the father of the subject of this brief memoir.

    He was born in the State of Delaware, but subsequently became a resident of Pickaway county, Ohio, and in 1823 came west and entered land lying about three miles north of Covington, now forming a part of the fine farm of 640 acres owned by his son, Geo. Nebeker. In 1824 he raised a small crop, built a cabin, and prepared a home for his family, whom he moved out in the fall of that year.

    The family consisted of his wife, Hannah (Morris), and eight children. He was a zealous member of the Methodist Episcopal church, and a hard worker in promoting the cause of religion in those days. His cabin, which was the first shingle-roofed building ever erected in the county, and which is still standing, was often selected as a meeting place of bishops and other prominent men of the church, to whom Mr. Nebeker extended a generous hospitality and a helping hand. His identification with the early settlement is given more extensively in the general history of the county.

    Geo. Nebeker was born in Pickaway county, Ohio, August 20, 1813. His early life was spent in Fountain county, where he acquired such education as the imperfect school system of those times afforded. Possessing, even in boyhood, a clear analytical mind, and having been taught by his father those principles of honesty and industry, Mr. Nebeker, without an apparent effort, grew rapidly to a position of prosperity and influence. He has taken an active part in almost every enterprise the object of which was to benefit the people of Fountain county.

    In 1850 he was one of a company of four who began the building of the bridge across the Wabash river. This bridge was subsequently completed at a cost of about $20,000, and is still the only wagon bridge across the river that affords a market to the people whose trade is tributary to the commercial interests of Covington.

    Mr. Nebeker was formerly a member of the whig party, but since its demise has been a strong republican. In 1862 he was appointed the first collector of internal revenue in Fountain county, and in 1863 was appointed by President Lincoln one of the three commissioners of the Board of Enrollment for his district.

    This appointment necessitated his removal to Lafayette; and just here it may be well to state that Mr. Nebeker was married in 1832, to Miss Mary, daughter of George Steely, by whom he reared a family of four sons and two daughters, and who died September 7, 1870. Mr. Nebeker has given each of his children a classical education.

    In 1863, when obliged to go to Lafayette, he moved his wife and three youngest children to Evanston, near Chicago, where the children were in college during the time that Mr. Nebeker was in the employ of the government and for two years after the close of his services. Mr. Nebeker has held the office of president of the First National Bank of Attica, in which he is a stockholder, since its organization, and in 1867, at the organization of the Farmers' Bank of Covington, by himself, Mr. Gish, and others, he was elected president of that institution, and is still connected with it in that capacity. At this bank he spends a part of his time, though Mr. Gish is the active member of the firm.

    Mr. Nebeker was for a long time one of the directors of the Indianapolis, Bloomington & Western railroad, and he is now connected in that capacity with the new railroad, in which he is a stockholder, that is in course of construction between Attica and Covington. He has for many years been a member of the Methodist Episcopal church, and he is also a Knight Templar and member of the order of A.F. and A.M.

    November 15, 1871, he was married to Miss Louisa Moore, widow of Wm. Moore, who resided in Terre Haute, Indiana. She is a lady of refinement and culture, and in every way well worthy to be the wife of a man whose name and reputation stand without a reproach before a people among whom he has spent sixty-six years of his life." History of Fountain County, Indiana, H.W. Beckwith, 1881

    Find a Grave

  4.   United States. 1850 U.S. Census Population Schedule. (National Archives Microfilm Publication M432).

    1850 U.S. Census Population Schedule
    Name: George Nebeker
    Age: 36
    Birth Year: abt 1814
    Birthplace: Ohio
    Home in 1850: Troy, Fountain, Indiana
    Gender: Male
    Family Number: 779
    Household Members: Name Age
    George Nebeker 36
    Mary Nebeker 35
    Reuben S Nebeker 16
    Enos H Nebeker 13
    Alonzo Nebeker 11
    Lucas Nebeker 5
    Hannah Nebeker 1

  5.   United States. 1860 U.S. Census Population Schedule. (National Archives Microfilm Publication M653).

    1860 U.S. Census Population Schedule
    Name: George Nebeker
    Age in 1860: 46
    Birth Year: abt 1814
    Birthplace: Ohio
    Home in 1860: Troy, Fountain, Indiana
    Gender: Male
    Post Office: Covington
    Household Members: Name Age
    George Nebeker 46
    Mary Nebeker 45
    Reuben S Nebeker 26
    Enos H Nebeker 24
    Alonzo Nebeker 21
    Lucas Nebeker 15
    Hannah Nebeker 12
    Lizzy J Nebeker 7
    Jane Diehl 25
    Artimetia Diver 17

  6.   United States. 1870 U.S. Census Population Schedule. (National Archives Microfilm Publications M593 and T132).

    1870 U.S. Census Population Schedule
    Name: George Nebeker
    Age in 1870: 57
    Birth Year: abt 1813
    Birthplace: Ohio
    Home in 1870: Troy, Fountain, Indiana
    Race: White
    Gender: Male
    Post Office: Covington
    Household Members: Name Age
    George Nebeker 57
    Mary Nebeker 56
    Reuben S Nebeker 35
    Alonza Nebeker 31
    Hannah Nebeker 20
    Elizabeth Nebeker 17
    Fanny Hulbroyd 17
    Charles Hulbroyd 9