Transcript:Helm, Thomas B. History of Delaware County, Indiana/p231 Smith

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[Note: p 231 of original, transcribed by Lora Radiches ]

Husband  John C Smith
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Husband
John C Smith

JOHN SMITH

His paternal grandfather came from England and settled in the State of Vermont, where he engaged at farming, and later, at the carpenter’s trade. During the struggle for independence, he espoused the cause of the Colonies, and participated in the battle of Bennington. He married Mary Bull and reared a family in the county of Bennington, where he resided until his decease. Nathan, his son, was the father of the subject of this sketch. He was born in the year 1711, in Bennington County, VT, and worked at home until he attained his majority. He married Rosanna Foster, a lady of Revolutionary antecedents, and a native of Connecticut, and shortly after marriage, settled upon a small farm given him by his father. There he was engaged until the year 1812, when he sold his farm and emigrated to Morgan County, Ohio, where he continued the pursuit of farming until his death in 1827.

His children were Electa, John, Mary Ann, Mahala, Ransom, Betsey, Elizabeth, Martha, Ambrose, Nancy and Stephen.

John, the eldest son and second child, was born September 23, 1799, in the town of Manchester, Bennington Co., Vt., and, until twenty-one years of age, was engaged in the usual duties of farm life at the home of his parents, attending the common schools during the winter. After attaining his majority, he engaged his services to various farmers, saving his earnings with a view to purchasing a farm. At the age of twenty-two years, he, accepted employment in the salt works at Kanawha Salt Licks, W. Va., where he earned from $25 to $30 per month, and at the close of his engagement, had saved a sum of money with which he purchased eighty acres of land in Muskingum County, Ohio.

January 5,1826, he was united in marriage with Miss Harriet A. Preston, the faithful wife whose presence has been spared by a kind Providence to cheer the declining years of his life. Her parents were Horace and Patty Preston. Her father was a farmer and millwright in Luzerne County, Penn., where their daughter, Harriet, was born January 6, 1808. The parents moved to Washington County, Ohio, in 1816, where the father was engaged in. the erection of mills, and also in the pursuit of farming, until his decease in 1828.

In December 1829 having disposed of his property in Ohio, Mr. Smith started out upon his journey to Indiana, with his family and all his household goods in a wagon drawn by three horses. The two eldest children of his family accompanied him to the home in the wilderness. During the winter of 1829—30, he left his family at in this county, and, in the meantime, purchased a forty- acre lot in Liberty Township, upon which a cabin had been erected and a small clearing made. Subsequently, he entered an eighty-acre tract adjoining and in April 1830, moved his family to the farm, which was yet to be cleared and improved. In this labor he spent the best years of his life, and cultivated his farm until about fifteen years ago, when he purchased his present residence on the Burlington Pike, just outside ofthe corporate limits of Muncie.

In the pursuit of his calling in life, he has always manifested an industrious nature, and the profits from his labors have accumulated year by year, not withstanding the lavish hand with which he has ever contributed to the support of all enterprises designed to promote the interests of his county, until, in the gloaming of life, he possesses a competence in earthly goods.

As members of the Methodist Episcopal Church, both himself and his estimable wife have led lives exemplary of the faith they and the noble, generous natures of each have endeared them to all with whom they have been associated in life. To crown the happiness of their wedded life there have been fifteen children: Caroline and Lucetta, both of whom were born in Ohio, and came with their parents to this county; Martha, Louisa, William H., George W., Mary, Benjamin F., Elvira, Daniel, Sarah, Edward, John, Emily and Eliza J.,who were born in Delaware County.

Lucetta married William Walling, and now resides on a farm opposite her father’s home; Martha (now deceased) was the wife of Parker Moore; Louisa, married to Milton Truitt, now resides in this county; George W. married Mary Moore, and now resides in the State of Minnesota, Mary, residing in the same State, is the wife of Andrew Gessell, Benjamin F., married to Sophia Keesling, resides upon the farm entered and improved by his father; Elvira married John Graham, and resides in this county; John D. married Sarah Franklin and resides in the State of Missouri; Emily is the wife of Samuel Gibson, Treasurer of Delaware County; Eliza J., the wife of Z. W. Simmons, resides at Selma, in this county; Caroline, William, Daniel, Edward and Martha are deceased.