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CAPTAIN GEORGE S. KIRKER, the youngest son of Gov. Thomas Kirker, was born on the old Kirker homestead in Liberty Township, Adams Co., Ohio, Feb. 7, 1813.  He was married in 1840 to Mary M. Cunningham, daughter of William and Ellen Doak Cunningham, of Virginia descent.  Their children living are Sarah Ellen, unmarried and residing at the old home; Charles E., Mary F., wife of A. P. McIntire; William C., who resides on the old homestead; Ora, wife of Edwin Morrison, of Pawnee City, Neb., and India A., residing at Axtell, Kansas.  Mr. and Mrs. Kirker lost six children in infancy.  Mary M. Kirker was born Mar. 17, 1817, and died at Manchester, Ohio, Apr. 13, 1887.  George S. Kirker lived his entire life on the farm in Liberty Township except the last four years, in which he made his residence in Manchester.  He died Sept. 15, 1879.  He was highly respected wherever he was known.  HE was a man of great public spirit.  If any measure was proposed or projected for the public benefit, he was always favorable to it and always supported it with great enthusiasm.  He was a manly man.  Whatever was just, whatever was upright, whatever was for good, he was for.  He was the means of having the pike from cherry Fork to Bentonville built, and but for his influence, its construction would have been delayed for years.     From 1863 to 1871, he, Crockett McGovney and Dr. D. M. McConaugh engaged in the pork packing business at Manchester.  It required a great deal of nerve and capital to go into that business and carry it on, but Kirker had both.  It was the largest and most important business carried on in Adams County while it lasted, and its being carried on was a great public benefit to the county.  True, the partners lost money, but the people who dealt with them did not.
     George S. Kirker was a prosperous and successful farmer and stock raiser.  No man in the county took more pride in fine stock than he did and those who knew him in his prime knew that he never was happier than when riding a fine horse.  He was always fond of horseback riding and usually had a saddle horse with a fancy gait.  At fifty years, he was a large man, with very black hair and a full black beard.  He had a fine presence and impressed strangers as a man of importance.  In his business dealings, he was direct and straight to the point and was the soul of integrity and fair dealing.  His industry and energy were untiring.
     When there was any business to be done, Mr. Kirker never rested until it was done.  He was a most jovial, agreeable companion.  He was full of humor and liked to give it play.  He was fond of a good story.  He was one of those whom others like to ask to take the lead and when his judgment approved, he never hesitated to take it.  When he did take it, the business went forward to a conclusion and usually to a successful one.  He was always in good spirits and his presence and manner put those about him in good spirits.  He was always inclined to take a cheerful view of things and to believe that a poor or bad condition of affairs could be bettered.  He was plain in his dress, in his speech and in his manners, but he believed in getting at the substance of things.  He was a man of strong will power and great tenacity of purpose.  He would not undertake any matter or enterprise unless it was within reason that it could be carried through and that he could bring it to a successful issue.  He had excellent judgment, and if it ever failed him, it was because of the influence of matters upon which he had not calculated.
     In the period of his business activity, he was a most valuable element in the community.  If any one was to lead in any project, he was usually selected as the one, and he never failed, when called upon, either to undertake the work placed upon him or to bring it to a fortunate conclusion.  He was a natural leader in the circle of his acquaintances.  It was this fact which made him a Captain in the 141st O. V. I.  He was a strong Republican in his political views and could not have been anything else.  He, however, unlike his distinguished father, had no taste for political office, and he never held any but that of Infirmary Director from 1863 to 1866.  He accepted this because his name added strength to the ticket on which he was and because he lived in the same township in which the infirmary was located.  His known sympathy for the poor and needy urged his candidacy and induced him to accept the office.  Then again, his contest was made in the middle of the war when patriots were discouraged and when strong men needed to come forward and encourage the war.  There is no man risen up in Mr. Kirker’s place with all his sterling qualities.  He set the world an example of life and character which ought to be remembered and perpetuated, and an example which, if followed, would increase the sum total of pleasure and contentment here, and happiness and hope for the future.
(Source 1: History of Adams County, Ohio - by Nelson W. Evans and Emmons B. Stivers – West Union, Ohio - Published by E. B. Stivers – 1900 – Page 774)

COL. WILLIAM KIRKER was born Jan. 24, 1791, in the vicinity of Pittsburg, Penn., the son of Governor Thomas Kirker and Sarah Smith, his wife.  He was the eldest son and child of a family of thirteen.  He married Esther Williamson and died Feb. 10, 1857.  His father moved to Manchester in 1792 and lived there until 1794 when the located on the well known Kirker farm in Liberty Township.  In the War of 1812, he was a First Lieutenant and after the war, he was made a Colonel of the Militia, which position he held until near the time of his death.  He was a First Lieutenant and after the war, he was made a Colonel of the Militia, which position he held until near the time of his death.  He was County Commissioner in 1825 and again in 1832.  He was made an elder in the Presbyterian Church at West Union in 1826, his father being an elder in the same church.  He was a delegate to the Presbytery from his church from Sept. 19, 1826, many times, until Apr. 5, 1854.  He was always courteous and kind to everyone and was noted for his philanthropy.  Judge J. C. Coryell said of him that he was the most useful man in his community, and that the poor, the widow and the orphan lost their best friend when he died.
     His wife, Esther Williamson, was born on June 4, 1797, and died Jan. 4, 1880.  He was a large family of children whose descendants are scattered throughout the United States.
(Source 1:  History of Adams Co., Ohio - 1900 - Pg. 577)
FREDERICK KNAUFF, of Blue Creek, was born May 14, 1848.  His ancestors were among the first of the pioneers of Blue Creek Valley, settling there when the region abounded with bear and deer, and when bands of marauding Indians paid occasional visits to the settlements along Scioto Brush Creek.  The parents of Mr. Knauff, Michael and Mary Wolfe Knauff, came from Germany to Butler County, Pa., where Frederick was born, and thence to Adams County.  Mary Knauff died April 7, 1892, and is buried at Liberty cemetery.  Michael Knauff is yet living at the age of eighty-three years.
     Our subject was educated in the country schools in which he has always taken much interest, being at present a member of the Board of Education of Jefferson Township.
     He was married March 30, 1869, to Elizabeth Lamb, a daughter of John and Elizabeth Boehm Lamb, by whom he has had eight children: John H., Luella A., William D., Wylie C., Anna R., Mary A., Harry J., and Roy A.  He is a Republican in his political opinions but very tolerant in his views.  He was raised in the Lutheran Church, but is not a member of any denomination at present.
(Source 1: History of Adams County, Ohio - by Nelson W. Evans and Emmons B. Stivers – West Union, Ohio - Published by E. B. Stivers - 1900)
PHILIP KRATZER of Blue Creek, was born near Arnheim, Brown County, Ohio, Oct. 7, 1839.  His father was Simon Kratzer, whose ancestors came from Pennsylvania, and his mother was Elizabeth Lindsey, a descendant of an old and respectable family of Brown County.  Our subject was reared on a farm and had the advantages of the country schools.  He enlisted from Georgetown, Ohio, August 128, 1862, and was mustered into the service of the United States at Camp Dennison as a Private, Company D, Captain Higgins, 59th Regiment, O. V. I., Colonel Fyfe, for three years.  Joined regiment at Cave City, Ky., and there promoted to Corporal.  Served in Nelson's Brigade, Wood's Division, Fourth Corps, Army of the Cumberland, and took part in all the battles in which his regiment participated including Stone River, Lookout Mountain, Resaca, Kenesaw Mountain, Siege of Atlanta, and was wounded at Mission Ridge.  He was transferred to Company K, Oct. 24, 1864, and served balance of time, and was honorably discharged June 28, 1865.
     Our subject was first married Jan. 18, 1865, to Miss Mahala Stayton, of Brown County, by whom he had four sons and four daughters: Robert, Rosetta, Jesse Lee, Stella, John F., George E., Emma and Nellie.  Mr. Kratzer's second wife was Matilda J. daughter of LEvi and Cynthia Lafara.
     Philip Kratzer
is one of the substantial citizens of Churn Creek Valley.  He is a faithful member of the Christian Union Church, and in politics an old-fashioned Democrat, and is an ardent admirer of that leader of Democracy, William J. Bryan.
(Source 1: History of Adams County, Ohio - by Nelson W. Evans and Emmons B. Stivers – West Union, Ohio - Published by E. B. Stivers - 1900)
 

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