Person:Solomon Houser (1)

Watchers
Solomon Houser
b.3 May 1801 Kentucky
m. Abt 1791
  1. Solomon Houser1801 - 1874
m. Est 1825
  • HSolomon Houser1801 - 1874
  • WNancy HawesEst 1810 - 1841
m. Est 1839
m. Aft 1841
Facts and Events
Name Solomon Houser
Gender Male
Birth[1] 3 May 1801 Kentucky
Marriage Est 1825 to Elizabeth Bixler
Marriage Est 1839 to Nancy Hawes
Marriage Aft 1841 to Sarah "Sally" Houser
Death[1] 15 Sep 1874 Logan County, Illinois
References
  1. 1.0 1.1 Houser, W. W. (William Wesley), and Pearl Chowning. Genealogy of the Houser, Rhorer, Dillman, Hoover families. (Bloomington, Illinois: Houser Genealogy Committee], 1910).

    Solomon, son of Jacob and Mary Houser, was born May 3, 1801. He lived to a good old age and was an upright Christian man, kind hearted, honest and true in all the relations of life, loved and respected by all who knew him. He married Miss Elizabeth Bixler, and three children were born to them. Harrison, who died young, Nancy and John Allen. His wife having died in 1838, he married Miss Nancy Hawes, daughter of John and Sarah (Phillips) Hawes, pioneer residents of Logan County, Illinois, who had also emigrated from Spencer, Kentucky.

    Mr. and Mrs. Houser lived in Sangamon County, Illinois, for one year, then returned to Logan County and built a home four miles west of where the town of Atlanta has since been built. This was a two story log house, not real common in those days, and the wife was ill and not able to climb to the second story, so the husband carried her up the stairs, and with pride displayed the home he had built, but which unfortunately they were not long to enjoy together. The wife died February 20,1841, leaving her little son, James Wilson, less than a year old. Mr. and Mrs. Houser were among the first members of the Eminence Christian Church. He later married Mrs. Sallie Clark, daughter of John and Polly (Arnspiger) Houser, who was the companion of his declining years and he preceded her in death. Died September 15,1874. He and his wife Nancy were both laid to rest in Niblick cemetery. [Logan County. Illinois]

  2.   Howser, M. L. Grandfather and grandmother Howser and some friends : their lives and times. (Peoria, Illinois: [s.n.], 1926).

    In his earlier years, his family had spoken only the German language in the home, and he was nearly grown before he could speak English without an accent. On his journey to Illinois, as he used to tell, he stopped one day at the home of a German family in which there were several nearly grown daughters, and asked in English for the loan of a bucket with which to water his horses. Assuming that he could not understand German, these girls discussed him with considerable freedom, speculating on who he was and where he was going, and noting about him the points in a man that are interesting to marriageable young women. Finally, one said that she believed he was a widower looking for a wife, that she had seen him first, and that the rest should keep off her preserves. She added that when she got him she would cure some of the defects which, by that time, the others were so industriously pointing out to her. While apparently busy with his team, he listened to her shrewd guesses and her sisters' bantering remarks, with some amusement but a blank expression, until ready to return the pail, and then he thanked her very elaborately -- in German. They went away from there -- right now. After he married his second wife, Nancy Hawes, he built her a sturdy, two story log dwelling. Grandfather Houser was born there on May 16, 1840.

  3.   http://www.the-lightfoots.com/genealogy/reports/pedigree_of_carol_renton/4386.htm