Person:John Black (95)

John Black
m. Bef 1800
  1. John Black1800 - 1856
m. 5 May 1825
  1. Lewis Black1832 -
Facts and Events
Name John Black
Gender Male
Birth[1][2] 24 Nov 1800 Washington County, Pennsylvania
Marriage 5 May 1825 to Catherine Moore
Death[1][2] Apr 1856 Brown County, Ohio
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 Ancestry.com. Public Member Trees: (Note: not considered a reliable primary source).
  2. 2.0 2.1 Higginson Book Company. The History of Brown County, Ohio: Containing a History of the County, Its Townships, Towns, Churches, Schools, Etc., General and Local Statistics, Portraits of Early Settlers and Prominent Men, History of the Northwest Territory, History of Ohio, Map of Brown County, Constitution of the United States, Miscellaneous Matters, Etc., Etc. (Brown County, Ohio: W. H. Beers & Co., 1883)
    Page 233.

    LEWIS BLACK, farmer, P. O. Russellville. John Black, father of our subject, was born November 24, 1800 in Pennsylvania. His father having died, his mother, with the remainder of her family, emigrated to Ohio. They were among the first who settled on the main branch of Eagle Creek, near where our subject at present resides. After living there several years, she married William Smith, and she remained where she settled until her death, in March 1849. John was married about the year 1824-25, to Catherine Moore, by whom he had eight children, two of whom are still living. He remained on the old homestead farm during the remainder of his life, in the peaceful avocation of farming, and died April 1856. His wife died in May of 1844. Lewis Black, son of John and Catherine Black, and subject of this sketch, was born October 11, 1832, in Brown County, on the homestead farm, where he still resides. He received but a rudimentary education in his youth, but being a man of good intellect and being able to grasp a subject with commendable readiness, he has, by continual reading and study, become familiar with many important topics of the day. In December, 1869, he married Miss Jane Richey (deceased), born in June, 1833, and daughter of Sauel and Ellen Richey. This union has been blessed with eight children, six of whom are still living – John W., Brice, Felicie M., James T., Catherine C. and Hester C. Mr Black has a fine farm of 141 acres, and is recognized as a good farmer.