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Showing posts with label Indiana. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Indiana. Show all posts

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Nathan M. Farlow
indiana real estate
Image by jajacks62
Co. F, 13th IND. Cavalry
From History of Montgomery County, Kansas, By Its Own People, Published by L. Wallace Duncan, Iola, Kansas, 1903, Pg. 333-335:

Farlow, Nathan M. Bio

Prominently identified with the agricultural and general material interests of Bolton and vicinity, is the gentleman and worthy citizen of this review, Nathan M. Farlow. He was numbered among the “second relief”, or the influx of immigrants who came to Montgomery county some fifteen years after its pioneer days and gave to it a new blood and a renewed vigor of citizenship. October 20th, 1887, was the day he began his residence among the toilers and the prairie pioneers, and he located on section 16, township 33, range 14, municipality of Rutland. He was actively connected with farm culture and improvement ‘till November 11th, 1902, when he established himself and his, now reduced family, in the village of Bolton, where he is modestly and quietly passing the evening of life.
Nathan M. Farlow is a native of Orange county, Indiana, born January 5th, 1842. His father, Jonathan Farlow, was one of the pioneers of the then Territory of Indiana, having settled there in 1811, an emigrant from the state of North Carolina. The latter was born in Orange county, the old, “Tar Heel State” in 1807, and accompanied his father, Joseph Farlow, into Indiana, where the first work of clearing up the heavily-timbered region was just taking place. The family were of the English Quaker stock, whose antecedents settled in North Carolina from the colony in Pennsylvania and were of the direct followers of William Penn. Jonathan Farlow was a quiet, dignified gentleman, industrious and thrifty, and performed a manly and honorable part in the affairs of his county in whatever capacity he was designated to occupy. He married Ruth, a daughter of John Maris, and died in 1873, thirty years after the death of his first wife. The children of the first marriage of Jonathan Farlow were: Jane, wife of Mark Hill, of Orange county, Indiana; Joseph of Bolton, Kansas; Deborah, who died in February, 1900, was the wife of John B. Atkinson, of Montgomery county; Thomas, who died in Orange county, Indiana, in January 1886; and Nathan M., of this record. Mary Hill became the second wife of Jonathan Farlow, and their children were: Lindley, of Kokomo, Indiana; Ruth, who died in 1875; Ellen, wife of Joseph Trimble, of Orange county, Indiana; and Sena, unmarried and residing in the same Indiana county.
The Maris’s are among the first settlers of Pennsylvania. They emigrated from Inkborough, in the county of Worcestor, England, in 1683, and joined the Quaker colony in Pennsylvania. George Maris was the founder of this branch of plain Quaker folk and the records show that he left England on account of his arrest and imprisonment for permitting a meeting of this religious sect at his house. His friends armed him with a letter commending him to the colony in America, and reciting in it consistency of his religious life and other striking traits of real character. This George Maris is the eighth gentlemen removed from Ruth Maris, the mother of the subject of this sketch.
Nathan M. Farlow came to manhood’s estate at a time and in a country when and where there was a prime opportunity to work. He “passed through” school in just a little while and it is not unfair to assume that while he was doing this feat he was also making a hand on the farm. He enlisted, January 4th, 1864, in Company F, 13th Ind. Vol. Cavalry, under Col. G. M. L. Johnson. The regiment was assigned to the Army of the Cumberland, and saw service in the States of Alabama, Tennessee, Georgia, Mississippi and Kentucky. He was with Gen. Grierson and Participated in some sharp bouts with the enemy of its own country, prior to its final order to rendezvous at Vicksburg, Mississippi, where its muster our occurred November 18th, 1865, by special order No. 76.
February 4th, 1868, Mr. Farlow married Martha Cloud, a daughter of Daniel and Mary A. (Milliken) Cloud, both of which families—the Clouds and the Millikens—were from the State of North Carolina. Beside Mrs. Farlow, the other Cloud children were a sister, Ann, deceased wife of James Jones, of Orange County, Indiana and a brother, William Cloud, of the same county and state. Mrs. Farlow was born February 21st, 1849, was reared on a farm, where her mother died in 1866, and her father in 1874. Mr. and Mrs. Farlow’s children are four in number, as follows: Elmer, a farmer in Montgomery county, Kansas, is married to Ella Finney; Harry, a merchant of Bolton, is married to Carrie Metzger; Mamie, wife of Daniel Webster Finney, of Montgomery county, Kansas; William C., who occupies the family homestead in Rutland township, has taken him to wife, Blanche Brownell.
Upon his return from the army Mr. Farlow resumed farming and has continued it without material interruption. He has participated in the affairs of his municipality as one interested in the public welfare and when such participation involved a question of political action, he has been an unswerving Republican. He never experienced confusion of opinions and consequent change of front when “ the great breakup of 1890” came on and he forecasted the comparative temporary character of that movement from the period of its first victory. Mr. Farlow is a trustee of the County High School, member of G. A. R. and A. H. T. A.

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Peter J. Schueth (1978)
indiana real estate
Image by lambdachialpha
Peter J. Schueth (1978), president of TEAM Mortgage, LLC, a mortgage broker/banker with offices in Indianapolis and Greenwood, Indiana, became Indiana’s first real estate finance/mortgage professional to attain dual standing as a nationally recognized Certified Mortgage Banker and a Certified Mortgage Consultant.

www.crossandcrescent.com/2006/06/chapter-news-8/#Coe


Rent or buy?
indiana real estate
Image by kevin dooley
Definitely a buyer's market out there.

Michigan City, Indiana. Diana+ with the telephoto lens (105mm) and Fuji Velvia medium format film.

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George L. Banks
indiana real estate
Image by jajacks62
Co. C, 15th IND. Infantry Medal of Honor Recepient.
This is a new marker placed behind his Civilian marker.
George L. Banks was born in Lake county, OH., Oct. 13, 1839. His parents, Orin and Olive (Brown) Banks, were natives of Scoharrie county, New York, and born the father January 25, 1803, and the mother March 12, 1805. They were married in 1823, and settled in Lake county, Indiana, in 1845 and stopped, first, in LaPorte county. They passed their lives as country people, were upright Christian folk and were thrifty as farmers of their time. They died in Lake county, Indiana, the father October 29, 1857, and the mother January 27, 1887. The Banks were Scotch-Irish origin and the Browns of English lineage. The parents both belonged to old families of the east and reared a large family of children, as follows: Charles, of Salina, Kansas; Elisha, of McPherson county, Kansas; Parley, of Lake county, Indiana; Mary C., wife of Simon White, of LaPorte county, Indiana; George L., of this notice; Nathaniel P., of Lake county, Indiana; Sarah L., wife of W. B. Adams of Montgomery county, Kansas.
George L. Banks spent his youth and early manhood in LaPorte county, Indiana, and had the advantage of a good country school education. The Civil war came on just after he had reached his majority, and was concerned with the serious affairs of peace, but he enlisted, June 6, 1861, in Company “C”, 15th Inf. under Col. Geo. D. Wagner. The regiment was ordered at once into the field and it took part in the battles of Greenbriar and Elk Water that same year. As the war progressed it participated in the battles of Shiloh, Perryville, Stone River and Missionary Ridge, where Mr. Banks was wounded, and rendered unfit for service for some weeks. During his later active service he was in battle at Charleston and Dandridge, Tennessee. He was discharged from the army June 25, 1864. In 1897, he received from the Secretary of War a medal of bronze, appropriately engraved and inscribed in commemoration of distinguished service while in the line of duty. Engraved on the face of the medal is:

“The Congress to Color Sergeant George L. Banks, 15th Indiana Infantry,

“For gallantry at Missionary Ridge, Tennessee, November 25, 1863.”

The letter from the Secretary of War notifying Mr. Banks of the honor accorded him and announcing the issuing of the medal states the specific acts of gallantry and is herewith made a part of this record:

MEDAL OF HONOR.

War Department, Washington, D. C. Sept. 21, 1897.

George L. Banks, Esq. – Independence, Kansas.

Sir:--You are hereby notified that by direction of the President and under the provisions of the Act of Congress approved March 3, 1963, providing for the presentation of medals of honor to such officers, non-commissioned officers and privates as have most distinguished themselves in action, a Congressional Medal of Honor has this day been presented to you for most distinguished gallantry in action, the following being a statement of the particular service: At Missionary Ridge, November 25, 1863, this soldier, then a Color Sergeant, 15th, Indiana Vols., in the assault, led his regiment, calling upon his comrades to follow, and near the summit he was wounded and left behind insensible, but having recovered consciousness rejoined the advance, again took the flag and carried it forward to the enemy’s works, where he was again wounded. In the brigade of eight regiments the flag of the 15th Indiana was the first planted on the Parapet.

The medal will be forwarded to you by registered mail as soon as it shall have been engraved.
Respectfully, R. A. Alger, Secretary of War.

From volume 4, pages 1840-1841 of A Standard History of Kansas and Kansans, written and compiled by William E. Connelley, Secretary of the Kansas State Historical Society, Topeka. Chicago: Lewis Publishing Company, copyright 1918

GEORGE L. BANKS. A sterling pioneer and citizen who is now living virtually retired in the City of Independence, Mr. Banks is specially entitled to recognition in this history. He was one of the early settlers of Montgomery County and has contributed his full quota to its civic and industrial development and progress, and he was long one of the prominent and influential exponents of agricultural industry in this section of the state. High honors also are his for the valiant service which he gave as a soldier of the Union in the Civil war.

Mr. Banks was born in Lake County, Indiana, October 13, 1839. His father, Orin Banks, was born in the State of New York, in 1800, and was there reared to manhood, his marriage having been solemnized in Schoharie County, that state. His entire active career was one of close association with the basic industry of agriculture and he was one of the pioneer farmers of LaPorte County, Indiana, where he established his home in 1845. In about 1850 he removed to Lake County, Indiana, where he died in 1856. He was a supporter of the democratic party until the organization of the republican party, when he transferred his allegiance to the latter. He was influential in community affairs and was called upon to serve in various township offices. Both he and his wife were devout members of the Baptist Church, in which he served as a deacon. Mrs. Banks, whose maiden name was Olive Brown, was born in Schoharie County, New York, in 1803, and thus she was eighty-three years old at the time of her death, in 1891, she having been at the time one of the most venerable pioneer women of Lake County, Indiana. Of the children the eldest was Betsey, who became the wife of Major Atkins, and who died in Lake County, Indiana, in 1866, her husband having long survived her and having been a farmer and capitalist of influence. Charles W., a lawyer by profession, died in 1907, in Chambers County, Texas. Morgan, a farmer and merchant, died in McPherson County, Kansas, in 1890. Elisha, who likewise became a representative farmer in McPherson County, died in 1906. Parley A. is a retired farmer and resides at Crown Point, Lake County, Indiana. Mary C. first married Balsar Keith, a farmer, near Union Mills, Indiana, and after his death she became the wife of Simon White, likewise a prosperous farmer of LaPorte County, Indiana. He likewise is deceased and his widow now resides at LaPorte, that county. William A., who died at LaPorte, Indiana, in 1903, had served six years as postmaster of that city and had been a leading importer of live stock in that section of the Hoosier state. George L., of this review, was the next in order of birth. The next two children were sons, both of whom died in infancy. Nathaniel P. is president of a bank at Hobart, Lake County, Indiana. Sarah Lavina is the wife of W. B. Adams, and they reside at Dearing, Montgomery County, Kansas, where Mr. Adams is vice president of a banking institution.

George L. Banks acquired his early education in the common schools of Lake and LaPorte counties, Indiana, and he continued to be associated with his father's farming operations until he had attained to the age of seventeen years. In the autumn of the year in which he reached this age he went to Minnesota and found employment in a pioneer sawmill at St. Anthony, the nucleus of the present great City of Minneapolis. The next year, 1857, found him employed in the lumber woods in the wilds of Northern Michigan, and he then returned to the old homestead farm. In Lake County, Indiana, he did a large amount of contract work in the digging of drainage ditches and for one year there he clerked in a grocery store, and afterward was a clerk in a dry-goods store. He finally resumed farming in his native county and was thus engaged at the outbreak of the Civil war. On the 6th of June, 1861, in response to President Lincoln's first call for volunteers, Mr. Banks enlisted as a private in Company C, Fifteenth Indiana Volunteer Infantry, with which gallant command he proceeded to West Virginia and took part in the engagements at Greenbriar and Elkwater. Later he was a participant in the memorable battles of Shiloh, Perryville, Murfreesboro, Chickamauga and Chattanooga. In the battle of Chattanooga he was thrice wounded but his injuries were not serious and he was incapacitated for a few weeks only. Mr. Banks was color sergeant of his regiment in the storming of Missionary Ridge, and most gallantly did he acquit himself on this historic field. The colors were shot down six times, and Mr. Banks himself was wounded on the first and last of these occasions. He was first shot in the ribs, and after regaining consciousness he was again wounded,—this time through the top of the head. His severe injuries incapacitated him from November, 1863, until January 14, 1864, and on the 25th of June of the latter year he was mustered out. Mr. Banks received and greatly prizes the Congressional medal of honor that was presented to him and that bears date of November 25, 1863, and he also has a letter from Hon. Russell A. Alger, at the time the latter was serving as Secretary of War, many years later, congratulating him on his admirable service during the ever memorable battle of Missionary Ridge. Mr. Banks, as color bearer for his regiment, was the first regimental color sergeant to plant the colors on the enemy's works at Missionary Ridge out of a brigade of six regiments, and for this gallant deed he received a medal of honor from Washington, District of Columbia.

After the close of the war Mr. Banks returned to his native county, where he followed farming until the spring of 1871, when he came to Kansas and numbered himself among the pioneers of Montgomery County. He settled in Fawn Creek Township, where he took up a pre-emption claim of 160 acres, and there he continued his farming operations for sixteen years. He developed and improved one of the fine farms of the county and was specially influential in township and community affairs. To his efforts was due the defining of the school district and the erection of the first schoolhouse of District No. 91, and this pioneer school was named in his honor. He had the supervision of the erection of the school building and was a member of the school board until he left his farm, in the autumn of 1886, when he returned to Indiana and became the proprietor of a hotel at Angola. In the following spring he exchanged his hotel property for a farm in Hillsdale County, Michigan, where he remained six years. He then sold his Michigan farm, or exchanged the same for property in Montgomery County, Kansas, where he again was actively engaged in agricultural pursuits for the ensuing two years. He thereafter passed two years at Independence, the county seat, but in 1896 he returned to his farm, upon which he continued to reside until 1903, when he resumed his residence at Independence. Here he has been engaged in the real estate and loan business and in the supervision of his various properties, so that he is not yet fully retired from active business, idleness and apathy being entirely foreign to his nature. He is the owner of valuable residential property in Independence, including his own attractive home, at 417 North Fifth Street, and near Bolton, this county, he owns 240 acres of valuable farm land, besides having another farm, of 160 acres, south of Dearing, this county, and 300 acres in Chambers County, Texas. On the farm near Bolton Mr. Banks effected the drilling of the first large oil well in Montgomery County, in 1903, and the same is still producing extensively.

Mr. Banks has not only achieved large and worthy success in connection with the practical affairs of life but he has also been most loyal and influential in public affairs in Southeastern Kansas. He served two terms as a representative of Montgomery County in the Kansas Legislature, 1905-7, and made a characteristically excellent record in furthering the interests of his constituent district and of wise legislation in general. He is a progressive republican and is well fortified in his convictions concerning governmental policies. While a resident of Fawn Creek Township he served six years as justice of the peace and later held the office of township trustee, his retirement from the office of justice of the peace having occurred in 1882. He has long been a zealous member of the Presbyterian Church, and is affiliated with the Grand Army of the Republic, the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, and the Anti-Horse Thief Society. Mr. Banks is one of the most appreciative and valued members of McPherson Post No. 4, Grand Army of the Republic, at Independence, and has not only served several terms as commander of the same but also as junior vice commander of the Department of the Grand Army for Kansas. It is worthy of special record that on the occasion of the fiftieth anniversary of his being mustered in for service in the Civil war his surviving regimental comrades presented him with a beautiful silk flag of the United States, this being a tribute that he deeply appreciated. Mr. Banks is one of the representative men of Montgomery County, has inviolable place in popular esteem and is one of the substantial citizens of Independence, and he is a director and the secretary of the Jefferson State Bank, at Jefferson, this county.

On the 8th of October, 1864, was solemnized the marriage of Mr. Banks to Miss Olive W. Chandler, and she was summoned to the life eternal nearly forty years later, while their home was on the farm near Bolton, Montgomery County. She was a gracious and gentle woman who was loved by those who came within the compass of her influence, and she died in the year 1902. Of the children of this union the eldest is William N., who is a representative member of the bar of Montgomery County, and is engaged in the practice of his profession at Independence; Charles B. is engaged in the real estate business at Caldwell, Idaho; and Arthur A. is at Denver, Colorado.

In 1904 Mr. Banks contracted a second marriage, when Mrs. Helen J. (Clarkson) Shoemaker, widow of Philo Shoemaker, became his wife. They reside in an attractive home at Independence, in which city she had resided prior to her marriage to Mr. Banks. No children have been born of the second marriage.




D. Webster Bostwick
indiana real estate
Image by jajacks62
Co. G, 133rd IND. Infantry
Pages 482-484, from History of Allen and Woodson Counties, Kansas: embellished with portraits of well known people of these counties, with biographies of our representative citizens, cuts of public buildings and a map of each county / Edited and Compiled by L. Wallace Duncan and Chas. F. Scott. Iola Registers, Printers and Binders, Iola, Kan.: 1901; 894 p., [36] leaves of plates: ill., ports.; includes index.

D. WEBSTER BOSTWICK.
D. WEBSTER BOSTWICK, of Iola, has been one of the conspicuous characters in the settlement and development of Allen county. To him is due in a great measure the credit for the actual work done in the location of a large per cent of the country population of the county and to his ingenuity as an immigration promoter is due the credit for the settlement of much of our eastern domain in Allen county. His name went from tongue to tongue through the east and his fame followed closely in its wake. No man who makes real estate his business in Allen county is as widely known as Web Bostwick and, in the olden time, no combination of dealers in the county possessed a wider or more universal confidence of the homeseeker from the east than Bowlus & Bostwick.
Web Bostwick came to Allen county November 11, 1866, and the following year located upon his brother's, H. C. Bostwick's, farm on Deer creek. Some three years later William Davis came along from Colorado and offered him his price for the place and he moved down to the Anderson and Finley ranch (that now is). What is now the Allendale Stock Farm was then an unbroken prairie and Web went onto it, broke a portion of it out, as any farmer would have done, began its improvement and in seven years sold it. This concluded his career as a farmer. He moved into Iola at once and entered the real estate business with Bowlus & Richards. The railroad lands of the county were just coming onto the market then and this agency handled almost the entire holdings adjacent to Iola. For eight years this firm remained intact and undisturbed in its enjoyment of a mammoth and lucrative business. Investors poured into the county from all directions and speculators and settlers vied with each other in the acquirement of tracts suitable for farms, for ranches and for investment. Retiring from this noted firm Mr. Bostwick joined D. B. D. Smeltzer in a loan and real estate business for some years and later was a partner with Judge H. W. Talcott in the same business. In 1895 he joined the well known townsman, Nels Acers, with whom he is yet a leader in the matter of handling city and country property.
The selling of real estate in Allen county was, in itself, an easy and pleasant business but to do so in defiance of an element of our citizens whose edict had gone out against it and whose threats were upon the lips of all was an undertaking involving munch hazard, with possible loss of life. From 1875 to 1885 the settlers on the disputed lands in the east part of our county determined not to have any more of the land sold by the agents of the railroad companies, desiring to have it entered as public domain and by persons whose interests would, from the start, be identical with their own. They even provided a penalty, or rather, suggested as a penalty for any agent violating this ukase, a bit of inch rope. It is stated that the rope was bought with which to square accounts with our subject but he never abandoned a trip nor lost a meal on account of it.
D. W. Bostwick was born in Portage county, Ohio, October 21, 1840. His father, Daniel Bostwick, was a millwright, foundryman and manufacturer of woolen goods. The latter was born in New York went into Ohio early and settled in Portage county. From this latter place he located in Park county, Indiana, and was in business there during, and for some time, after the war. He married Sophia Fondersmith, originally DeFondersmith, a Pennsylvania German lady. Late in life this venerable couple came to Allen county and passed their remaining years here. Mr. Bostwick died in 1876 at the age of seventy-six years, and his wife died in 1881 aged seventy-nine years. Their children were: Clarentine, deceased, who married Lewis Hine; Dr. Henry C. Bostwick, of Tacoma, Washington, surgeon of Ninth Kansas and now a Representative to the Washington Legislature; Leveues E. was killed in the Civil war as Captain of Company A, One Hundred and Fourteenth Indiana Volunteers, while in his seventeenth engagement; D. Webster; Maria, deceased, wife of Andrew Jackson Clark, of Tacoma, Washington; and Amfield S., deceased, who married Samuel Doren.
D. W. Bostwick grew up at Rockville, Indiana. He enlisted in Company G, One Hundred and Thirty-third Infantry and served in the western department. He took part in the Chickamauga and Nashville campaigns and, at the close of his service, was in the Independent sharpshooters.
Mr. Bostwick was married in Allen county in Iola, 1869, to Clementine C., a daughter of Dr. M. DeMoss, who was born and educated in Oxford, Ohio, and was one of the characters of Iola for many years. His wife was Miss Margaret C. Kennedy who was born and principally raised in the city of Washington. Their children were ten in number.
Mr. and Mrs. Bostwick's children are: Hattie B., a stenographer and type-writer in Tacoma, Washington; Misses Grace F. and Ella M.. teachers in the Iola city schools; Leveues H., a printer of Iola, and Pearl M., wife of R. E. Donaldson, of Seattle, Washington.
The early Bostwicks were Whigs and their posterity dropped naturally into the Republican party, following the issues of the war.



Nice Indiana Real Estate photos

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Elnathan Wert
indiana real estate
Image by jajacks62
Co. B, 120th IND. Infantry
The Humboldt Union, Thursday, Oct. 2, 1919
Died: Sept. 26, 1919

E. N. WERT AT REST.
_________
Pioneer Citizen and Civil War Veteran
Passed Away at His Home
In This City Friday Morning.


E. N. Wert, soldier of the Civil war and pioneer citizen of Humboldt, passed away at his late home here at 4 o’clock Friday morning, September 26. His last illness came upon him only a few days before. In the spring of 1910 he suffered a stroke of apoplexy since which time he had practically been an invalid.
Mr. Wert was born January 20, 1839, in Cincinnati, Ohio. In early childhood he removed with his parents to Montgomery county, Indiana, where he received a common school education. He also spent several terms in Wabash college in Crawfordsville, Ind. His boyhood days were spent on a farm and he afterward learned the carpenter trade which he followed for a number of years.
At the beginning of the Civil war Mr. Wert enlisted in the 10th Indiana, Company B, and after serving three months was discharged. He then joined the 63rd Indiana, remaining in its service for twelve months and was placed on detail duty in the secret service for one year. He recruited a number of men for Company B, 120th Indiana, and was with that company in the 23rd corps until the close of the war. He was mustered out of the service in November, 1865.
In September of ’67 he started for the West and reached Humboldt on October 23. After farming and working as a carpenter for a short time Mr. Wert entered the law and real estate firm of Gilbert & Suit and was admitted to the bar in 1872, selling his interest in the firm five years later. For twelve years he was engaged in the livery business here and then moved to a farm which he owned in Woodson county, near Toronto. Ten years later he returned to Humboldt and has since made his home here.
Mr. Wert was an esteemed member of the Odd Fellows lodge and of Vicksburg Post, G. A. R. He is survived by his widow. Funeral services were held at the home at 2 o’clock Sunday afternoon, September 28, religious services were conducted by the Church of Christ Scientist. Members of Humboldt Lodge No. 30, I. O. O. F., acted as pall bearers and were in charge of the services at Mount Hope where the remains were laid at rest.

William Cutler wrote the following about this gentleman:

F. N. WERT, proprietor of the Humboldt Livery, Feed and Sale Stable, was born at Cincinnati, Ohio, January 20, 1839. Six months later his parents immigrated to Montgomery County, Ind.; there he enlisted in Company B, One Hundred and Twentieth Indiana Infantry. Was mustered out June 20, 1865, after which he was employed as a carpenter in Indiana. He came to Kansas in November, 1867, and located in Allen County, and was for three years engaged in agricultural pursuits. Moving to Humboldt, he opened a real estate and law office with others, under the style of Gilbert, Suits & Wert. Three years later he sold out his interest, and was employed as a traveling salesman until October, 1880, when he engaged in his present business. He deals extensively in horses; has fine barns and good livery stock.

Pages 309-311, History of Allen and Woodson Counties, Kansas: embellished with portraits of well known people of these counties, with biographies of our representative citizens, cuts of public buildings and a map of each county / Edited and Compiled by L. Wallace Duncan and Chas. F. Scott. Iola Registers, Printers and Binders, Iola, Kan.: 1901; 894 p., [36] leaves of plates: ill., ports.; includes index.

ELNATHAN N. WERT.
ELNATHAN N. WERT, of Humboldt, was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, on the 20th of January, 1839, and was the third child born unto Richard D. and Amanda Wert. His father was born in Germany, March 10, 1810, and with his parents came to America in 1813, landing at Jersey City, residing there two years and subsequently removing to Cincinnati. In early life he learned the cooper's trade, but afterward engaged in farming. In 1839 he married Miss Amanda Compton, a native of Ohio, and removed to Indiana, securing a homestead near Crawfordsville, where he made his home until his death, which occurred in 1893. His wife passed away in January, 1865. They had six sons and six daughters, all of whom reached years of maturity.
E. N. Wert spent his youth in Montgomery county, Indiana, where he attended the common schools, after which he spent two years in Wabash College of that state. When the war broke out he enlisted in 1861 for three months' service as a member of Company B, Tenth Indiana Infantry, and participated in the battle of Rich Mountain. When his term had expired he received an honorable discharge, but re-enlisted for one year's service in Company B, Sixty-third Indiana Infantry. He was detailed for duty in the secret service and received a lieutenant's pay. On the 1st of September, 1863, he resigned, but soon afterward was appointed recruiting officer and recruited sixty-four men, with whom he joined Company B, One Hundred and Twentieth Indiana Infantry, being assigned to the position of corporal. Successive promotions came to him as orderly sergeant, second and first lieutenant, and he was detailed to act as General Cox's body guard with the Third Division and Twenty-third Army Corps, thus serving until November 30, 1865, when he was discharged under general orders at David Island in New York harbor. He was ever a loyal soldier, true to the stars and stripes, but when the country no longer needed his services he gladly returned to his home and family.
Mr. Wert was married on the 22nd of January, 1860, to Elizabeth Copner, a native of Indiana. After following carpentering in the Hoosier state until the fall of 1867, he brought his family to Kansas, arriving in Humboldt on the 22nd of October. Here he secured a clerkship in the United States land office, under Colonel Goss, with whom he worked for three months. He then secured a homestead three miles north-east of Humboldt, residing thereon until December, 1869, when he returned to the city and entered into partnership with Messrs. Gilbert and Suits in the law and real estate business. This connection was maintained until 1873, when Mr. Wert sold out and became traveling salesman for the Singer Sewing Machine Company, which he represented on the road for ten years. He went into the livery business in Humboldt and traded his livery stock for a Woodson county farm which he moved to and operated some years. On selling that property he became owner of eight hundred acres in Gove county, Kansas, where he engaged in general farming and stock raising for four years. On the expiration of that period he disposed of his land, purchased property in Humboldt and has since made his home in this city.
On the 16th of August, 1869, he was called upon to mourn the loss of his wife, who died leaving three children, but William and James are now deceased. Nettie, the only surviving child is the wife of John Dornburg, of Allen county. For his second wife he chose Frances E. ScanIon, their marriage being celebrated September 19, 1878.
Mr. Wert has always been an active worker in the Republican party since attaining his majority. He was deputy sheriff for four years, filled the office of justice of the peace, and in both positions discharged his duties in very commendable manner. He is a valued member of the Odd Fellows Lodge of Humboldt, in which he has filled all the chairs. He also belongs to the Grand Army of the Republic and was a delegate to the national encampments in San Francisco and Columbus, Ohio. In his early life he twice sailed round Cape Horn as a cabin boy, the voyage, in those days of primitive navigation, consuming six months. He has visited every state and territory of the Union, gaining that experience and knowledge which only travel can bring. His has been an active, useful and honorable life and now he is enjoying a well-earned retirement from labor, occupying a pleasant home in Humboldt, where he has the warm regard of a large circle of friends.


Louisville Skyline
indiana real estate
Image by The Pug Father
Louisville KY Skyline at night from the Indiana side of the river...

Fleur-Design Photography

Photo has been used in many places...

In several issues of Sophisticated Living magazine (with full consent, thank you!)

On the cover of Triple Cross, a murder novel by Kit Ehrman. (with full consent and a complimentary copy of the book! Thanks!)

Expert Real Estate Louisville (without prior consent and no credit given)

In the header design of Louisville History & Issues.

In the Louisville Wikipedia article. (without consent but with full credit / attribution as asked for in the CC license)

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