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| F. W. Booth—A. E. Boyer | ||||||||
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Frank Walworth Booth
Born July 27, 1855 | |||||||||
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Booth, Frank Walworth, educator, b. Anamosa, Jones Co., Iowa, July 27, 1855; s. Edmund and Mary Ann (Walworth) Booth. (Father b. August 24, 1810, Chicopee, Mass.; d. Mar., 1905, Anamosa; editor Anamosa Eureka; a California goldseeker in '49; he was deaf, educated in the Hartford, Conn., School for the Deaf, in which he later taught; descendant of Robert Booth, a settler in Saco, Me., 1642, from England, and of Capt. Joseph Booth, of the Revolution. Mother b. February, 1817, Canaan, N. H.; d. January 25, 1898, Anamosa; she was deaf, educated at Hartford; descended from William Walworth who came from England 1652, at Noank, Conn.) Ed. Anamosa H.S., 1872; B.Sc., Iowa State Col., 1877. M. Marion Elizabeth Hendershot (b. Monroe, Monroe Co., Mich.) August 3, 1892, Monroe. Ch. Edmund Hendershot (prof. of English, Dartmouth Co.; m. Jean Challis Hooker) Hanover, N.H.; Marion Frances (technician Deaconess Hosp., Buffalo) Buffalo, N.Y.; Robert Plues (lawyer) Manchester, N. H., Republican. Omaha resident 17 years. Taught at Iowa State Col. 2 years; Iowa School for Deaf, 4 years, Philadelphia School for Deaf 16 years; gen. sec. Am. Assn. to Promote Teaching of Speech to Deaf, 9 years; Supt. Volta Bureau for Increase and Diffusion of Knowledge Relating to the Deaf, Washington, D.C., 3 years, Supt. Neb. School for the Deaf, 17 years. Mem. Clifton Hill Presbyn. Church, Sons of the Am. Revolution, Ad-Sell League, Am. Instructors of the Deaf, Assn. to Promote Teaching of Speech to the Deaf, Soc. of Oral Advocates, Kiwanis Club, Mason, (inactive, has demit). Home and Office; 3223 No. 45th St.
Submitted by: Marcia Kohl
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T. E. Booth
Born February 11, 1842 | |||||||||
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There are few men whose lives are crowned with the honor and respect which is uniformly accorded to T. E. Booth, for through more than a half century's connection with Anamosa's history his record has been characterized by all that makes for honorable manhood and progressive citizenship. With him success in life has been reached by his sterling qualities of mind and a heart true to every manly principle. The record is uneventful if judged by the standard of exciting experiences, et his influence has not been a latent factor in the life of the community but rather a steady moving force which has wrought for general progress and advancement. He is known in journalistic circles throughout the state as the proprietor of the Anamosa Eureka. He set his first line of type in the office of which he is now the owner.
His father, Edmund Booth, was at one time the owner of the Eureka, and when he passed away at the age of ninety-four years he was the oldest editor in America and the oldest teacher of the deaf, probably, in the world, He was himself a semi-mute, for though he could speak he could not hear, and his wife was both deaf and dumb. Their marriage license is the first one recorded in Jones county, Iowa, having been issued in 1840. Their son, T. E. Booth, was born February 11, 1842, in Fairview township, and has since lived within its borders save for a period of less than two years. His early education was acquired in common schools of the most ordinary kind, and even then his opportunities were limited because of the necessity for his labor on the farm. His ambition, however, was not in agricultural lines, but tended toward the printer's trade and he served a three years' apprenticeship in the office of the Eureka, which had been established in the fall of 1856 by John E. Lovejoy, a brother of the distinguished orator and Illinois congressman, Owen Lovejoy, and also of Elijah Lovejoy, who was killed at Alton, Illinois, because of his advocacy of anti-slavery sentiments. The new paper had little support and proved such a disheartening enterprise that Mr. Lovejoy sold it to C.L.D. Crockwell, a local druggist, a few weeks after it was started. In January, 1858, Matt Parrott, a job printer of Davenport, Iowa, purchased a half interest in the paper and was local editor and foreman when Mr. Booth began his apprenticeship. "The first thing he did on that day so eventful to us," writes Mr. Booth in the Eureka many years afterward, "was to bring forth a big box of nonpareil pi, probably a half peck of small legal matter type that some printer unluckily spilled out of a case. Mr. Parrott set a line to show which side up the nicks should be and turned the stick over to us. Another boy, Douglas, son of Mr. Crockwell, started at the same time. He soon tired of the job and quit." The Eureka at that time had a circulation of four hundred, including exchanges, but it had little advertising patronage and its main source of support came from the sheriff sales, original and probate notices and the tax list after the county went republican in 1859. Not long after Mr. Booth became connected with the paper his father purchased a part of Mr. Crockwell's interest in the Eureka, of which practically he had been the editor from the first. The equipment of the plant included a Washington press but there was no job press, the hand press being used to print the few little "jobs" that were brought to them. For his apprenticeship Mr. Booth was to receive thirty dollars for the first year, forty-five dollars for the second year and sixty dollars for the third. but such was the financial outlook of the paper that during the three years he did not receive, perhaps, more than ten dollars in cash with the smallest possible allowance for clothing. During the second summer he and Mr. Parrott set up and printed the paper without any other help. His apprenticeship concluded, he spent twenty months in an eastern academy and then returned to take his place in the office of the Eureka. Since that time he has been continuously connected with the paper, doing every kind of work in the office, mechanical, business and editorial. He had thought in early youth to some day become connected with a metropolitan establishment, but fate decreed otherwise and he has remained in the Eureka office, which has been owned by the Booths for more than four decades. The Eureka has always been an example of clean journalism, characterized by progressiveness in keeping with the advancement that has characterized the country press. Its columns have been used to advocate all measures and movements which has had for their object the betterment of municipal or county interests and in the discussion of state and national policies its tone has been no uncertain one, yet with none of the bitter aggressiveness or partisanship that is too often seen in the local press. Mr. Booth is himself a fair-minded man, capable of looking at the question from an unprejudiced standpoint and his advocacy of any issue or principle has been sufficient to win for it other followers on account of the public confidence felt in his judgment. From History of Jones County, Iowa, Past and Present, R. M. Corbitt, S. J. Clarke Publishing Co., Chicago, 1910, p. 184. | ||||||||
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John Bothwell
Born 1822 | |||||||||
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JOHN BOTHWELL, farmer, Rome Twp., Sec. 14; P.O. Olin; born in Scotland in 1822; came to America in 1822, and to Iowa in 1860; bought eighty acres; now owns 50 acres: at present time, lives in Shelby Co., with his son. His wife, Caroline Seely, was born in New York in 1839; came to Iowa in 1837; married in 1847; of the children, four are dead and seven are living and settled in the West; but two are at home.
From History of Jones County, Iowa, Western Historical Company, Chicago, 1879, page 643. | |||||||||
| Hugh Bowen | |||||||||
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HUGH BOWEN, farmer, Wayne Twp., Sec. 1; P.O. Monticello; born in Jones Co., Iowa, on Bowen's Prairie;" his father settled there, and the prairie received its name in honor of him; Mr. Bowen, Sr., was one of the oldest settlers in Jones Co.; he died in Colorado in 1864; his wife is still living and in Richland Township. His wife's maiden name was Jane Simmons, a native of Illinois; they were married in June, 1878; they have one child. Mr. B. lives on the farm of his father-in-law, Mr. Henry Simmons, and is also engaged in hauling milk to the creamery at Monticello. Mr. B. is a Democrat.
.From History of Jones County, Iowa, 1879, (Chicago: Western Historical Publishing Company), p. 622, and submitted by Mary Kay Kuhfittig. | |||||||||
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William Bowers
Born 1834 | |||||||||
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WILLIAM BOWERS, farmer, Cass Twp., Sec. 6; P.O. Anamosa; born in Wayne Co., Ohio, in 1834; he came to Jones Co. with his parents, Henry and Catherine Bowers, in 1854; his father settled in Fairview Township; he died in 1868; his mother now resides in Ashland Co., Ohio. Mr. Bowers entered his farm in 1854, where he has since resided. He was married January 9, 1855, to Susan E. Davis, of Ohio; they have six children—Arminda V., Arthur W., Frances C., May, Elmer and Maud; they have lost five children, all of whom died in infancy. Mr. Bowers is a Justice of the Peace, and has held other township offices. He is a Republican in politics.
From History of Jones County, Iowa, Western Historical Company, Chicago, 1879, page 693. | |||||||||
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Asa E. Boyer
Born October 1887 | |||||||||
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Asa E. Boyer, filling the position of county recorder, to which he was elected on the 3d of November, 1908, is one of the native sons of Jones county, his birth having occurred in Fairview township, in October, 1887. His parents, B. F. and Margaret (Falor) Boyer were natives of Indiana and Jones county, Iowa, respectively, and are now residents of Anamosa. Their family numbers but two sons, the younger brother being Clarence Boyer, who also resides in Anamosa. The family is of German lineage and was founded in America by Joseph Boyer, a native of Germany, who came to the United States at an early age and settled first in Pennsylvania. He afterward removed westward to this county, becoming one of its pioneer residents. Isaac Falor was for a long time a partner of Mr. Metcalf in a sawmill and was a prominent man. It will thus be seen that the family has been a factor in the development and progress of this section of the state for a long period and the name has ever been a synonym for good citizenship.
At the early age of fourteen years Asa E. Boyer was thrown upon his own resources and as the architect of his own fortunes has built wisely and well. He was first employed in the telephone office where he remained for about a year and a half, when, realizing the necessity and value of further education as a preparation for life's practical duties if he would work his way upward, he reentered the public schools, which he attended until eighteen years of age, when he was graduated from the high school. He was then employed in different ways for about a year, devoting some time to teaching school and later resumed his education as a student in the State University at Iowa City. There he remained for about a year, when he met with an accident which incapacitated him for active work for some time. Returning to Anamosa in May, 1908, he secured employment in the Welch factory and there continued until the opening of the succeeding year. In the meantime he had been made the democratic candidate for the office of county recorder and the election, which was held on the 3d of November 1908, showed that he was the popular choice for the position. On the 1st of January he entered upon his duties which he is now discharging in a systematic, prompt and capable manner, his record being equal in its efficiency to that of any previous incumbent in the position. He has always been an advocate of democratic principles since age conferred upon him the right of franchise. He belongs to the Episcopal church and is a young man whose sterling traits of character have won him a strong hold upon the regard and affections of his fellow townsmen. From History of Jones County, Iowa, Past and Present, R. M. Corbitt, S. J. Clarke Publishing Co., Chicago, 1910, p. 487. | |||||||||
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