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John C. Kartchner The
life record of John C. Kartchner, a venerable farmer and honored pioneer of
Poweshiek Township, Jasper County, demonstrates that the road to positions of
influence among men, whatever the relation of life may be, is open to all who
may possess the courage to tread its pathway, besides serving as an incentive to
the young of the present generation, teaching by incontrovertible facts that
true excellence in any worthy undertaking is ambition's legitimate answer.
His long and useful life was crowned with much good to himself, his family and his
neighbors and the community at large, for he was industrious, honest,
broad-minded and kind-hearted. and in the golden evening of his years he could
look backward over a well-spent career and forward with no apprehension. Mr. Kartchner was born November 14, 1816, in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, the son of Christopher and Prudence (Wilcox) Kartchner, and there he grew to maturity and attended the old-time schools in the brief winter months, assisting his father during the balance of the year, remaining under his parental roof-tree until he was nine years of age. In 1835 he came to Perry County, Illinois, when that country was new, and there he engaged in farming, also worked in a carriage shop, making springs and became a very proficient workman. Mr. Kartchner was married in 1846 to Nancy Ash,
daughter of Hiram and Susan (Clingman) Ash, who moved from Luzerne County,
Pennsylvania, to Illinois in pioneer days, when the subject's wife was fourteen
years of age. Mr. Kartchner came to Jasper
County, Iowa, in 1846 and began life in typical pioneer fashion, undergoing the
usual hardships and privations, but, nothing daunted, he remained and took part
in the work of transformation of the wild prairies to fertile farms.
He and his wife lived continuously on the same farm from 1846 until their
deaths. He died on the 20th of June
1911, and his wife died October 1, 1911. Their
residence here thus covered a period of sixty-five years, a remarkable fact.
During this time they became well known throughout this
part of the County. They had worked
hard and in their declining years they had plenty and, what is more to be
desired, the good will and friendship of all who knew them, for their lives had
been exemplary in every respect and they had been of great service to the
community. The following
children were born to Mr. and Mrs. Kartchner: Susannah married Joseph Scott and
they are both deceased: Diadama married John Collins and they live in Poweshiek
Township; William Henry died when fifteen years of age; Elizabeth Prudence is at
home on the old homestead; Frank Marion died in 1900, when forty-one years of
age; he was never married; Christopher Columbus, who is yet single, is living in
Poweshiek Township; Nathan Oliver is single and living on the old homestead,
having bought the same. John Wesley
married Leaty Woodbury and is living on a farm near Colfax. John
C. Kartchner and his wife were both invalids, but their children took a delight
in administering to their every want and they spent their last years serenely,
he being in his ninety-fifth year at time of death and she was eighty-seven
years old on September 24, 1911. The
Past and Present of Jasper County, Gen. James B. Weaver, Editor-In-Chief, 1912
B.F. Bowen Co., Indianapolis, IN, p. 1152. |
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