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Athens County, Ohio
History & Genealogy


 

Source:
History of Hocking Valley, Ohio
Together with Sketches of its Cities, Villages and Townships,
Educational, Religious, Civil, Military, and Political History, Portrait of Prominent Persons, and
Biographies of Representative Citizens.
Published Chicago: by Inter-State Publishing Co.
1883

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

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MRS. MARY (KOOSER) TEDROW was born in Somerset County, Penn., Sept. 3, 1800.  Sept. 5, 1820, she married Jacob Tedrow, also a native of Somerset County, born June 7, 1792.  They came to Ohio in 1836 and settled near where Mrs. Tedrow now resides. They had a family of eleven children, nine now living—Drusilla, born Sept. 30, 1822, now the widow of George Wyatt; Harriet, born Feb. 2, 1826, now the widow of J. McHorten; Noah, born Feb. 1, 1828; Rebecca, born Dec. 2, 1829, now Mrs. James Robertson; Jane, born Dec. 3, 1832, now Mrs. Samuel Copeland; Oliver, born Sept. 16, 1836; Mary Ann, born Feb. 2, 1838; Effie, born Feb. 1, 1841, now the widow of Henry Norris, and Charles, born July 3, 1844.  Mrs. Tedrow has 166 acres of fine land on section 35, Rome Township.  She and her daughter Mary are members of the Presbyterian church at New England.  Mr. Tedrow died July 1, 1873.
Source:  History of Hocking Valley, Ohio, Publ. Chicago: by Inter-State Publishing Co., 1883 - Page 599
NEIL TEDROW, born in Somerset County, Penn., Feb. 1, 1828, is the second child of Jacob and Mary (Kooser) Tedrow.  He came to Ohio with his parents in 1837, and, with the exception of six months spent in Muskingum County , has since that time resided in Athens County.  He was married Oct. 7, 1855, to Nancy Yazer, a native of Greene County, Penn., born Feb. 2, 1830.  They have three children—Sarah, born Dec. 19, 1857, now Mrs. G. W. Parker; Mary, born March 16, 1862, and George, born Dec. 5, 1868.  Mr. Tedrow has 700 acres of fine land in Pome Township, his residence being on section 35.  He makes a specialty of stock-raising.  Mr. and Mrs. Tedrow and their daughters are members of the Presbyterian church.
Source:  History of Hocking Valley, Ohio, Publ. Chicago: by Inter-State Publishing Co., 1883 - Page 599
FRANCIS TIBBLES, son of John and Jane Tibbles, was born in Carthage Township, Athens Co., Ohio, Jan. 26, 1826.  His youth was spent in assisting his father to improve the farm, receiving but a limited education in the subscription schools.  He now owns a fine farm of 200 acres, all well improved.  May 21, 1856, he married E. J. Elliot, a native of Ireland, and a daughter of William Elliot, who settled in Athens County in 1842.  They have three children - Elza G., Sarah Frances and William E.  One son, Albert, died in 1861; another, Addison B., died April 2, 1883, and a daughter, Nellie, died in 1882.  Politically, Mr. Tibbles is a Democrat.  He is a member of the Masonic fraternity.
SOURCE:  History of Hocking Valley, Ohio - Published Chicago: by Inter-State Publishing Co. - 1883 - Page 729
JOHN TIBBLES, deceased, was born in Pennsylvania, Sept. 16, 1796, a son of Thomas and Elizabeth (Hayes) Tibbles.  He was reared in his native State and in 1817 came to Athens County, Ohio, and settled on the farm now owned by his son Francis.  It was wild, heavily timbered land, the nearest house being four miles east of it.  He improved a farm of 130 acres, and, being a brick-maker by trade, made the brick of which his residence is built.  He was married in 1818 to Jane Caldwell, a native of Ireland, who came to America when five years of age.  They had a family of six children - James, Alexander, Francis, Elizabeth, John, Joseph.  Joseph and Alexander were members of the Seventy-fifth Ohio Infantry and died in teh service in 1862 and 1863.  Mr. Tibbles died Jan. 4, 1866, and his wife April 16, 1878.
SOURCE:  History of Hocking Valley, Ohio - Published Chicago: by Inter-State Publishing Co. - 1883
- Page 729
AUSTIN TRUE, section 18, Dover Township, was born on the old homestead, where he now resides, Mar. 6, 1818, and was a son of Josiah True (deceased).  Mr. True was brought up on the old homestead, and received but limited educational advantages.  He has always lived on the farm, and formerly was extensively engaged in dealing in stock, buying and shipping to Baltimore.  He was married Feb. 11, 1844, to Jane, daughter of Resolved Fuller.  They have had four children, three of whom are living—Hiram, Sarah and John.  The first married - Julia Weethee, and had one child— Marcus W.  His wife died, and he then married Helen Moore.  They have two children—Evelyn and AugustaSarah True married Levi Sprague, and has had five children—Florence L. (deceased), Wiley T., Warren V., Myra G. and Jennie EJohn True married Mattie Maxwell, and has three children—Effie J., Laura E. and Lydia.  Hiram was in the late war about nine months.  He is now a physician in McConnelsville, Ohio.  Mr. True owns about 1,000 acres of valuable land, and is engaged in farming and stockraising.  Mrs. True died in October, 1853.  Mr. True never seeks for office or public favors.
SOURCE:  History of Hocking Valley, Ohio - Published Chicago: by Inter-State Publishing Co. - 1883 - Page 764
JOSIAH TRUE, deceased, a companion and friend of Daniel Weethee, and one of the pioneers of the county, was born in New Hampshire, Oct. 25, 1776.  He came to Marietta in 1793, and to Dover Township in 1800.  He held the office of Justice of the Peace in Dover from 1815 till 1851, and was respected and popular.  He died Sept. 16, 1855.  Mr. True was one of the founders of the “Coonskin Library” of Ames Township, and always a leader in pioneer improvements.  One of the first spinning wheels introduced into Dover was bought by him in 1803.  Having accumulated a few bear and deer skins he carried them on his back to Zanesville, forty miles distant, purchased the wheel with the proceeds of the skins, and brought it home on his back.  He walked all the way, and made the round trip of eighty miles in two days.  Mr. True at a very early day bought some choice apples at Marietta and sowed the seeds from them, from which he established the first nursery attempted in the county.  Most of the old orchards on Sunday and Monday Creeks were planted from this nursery, and some of the trees are still bearing.
SOURCE:  History of Hocking Valley, Ohio - Published Chicago: by Inter-State Publishing Co. - 1883 - Page 787
C. G. TUCKER, was born in Athens County, Ohio, Dec. 1, 1847. He was married April 19, 1879, to Margaret A. Jackson, a native of Athens County, born in 1851. They have two children —Jessie M., born Jan. 25, 1880, and Charles Guy, born Dec. 2, 1882.  Mr. Tucker has been Constable of RoNme Township twelve or fifteen years, and Township Assessor seven years.  He has sixty-five acres of land where be resides, on fraction 24, and an interest in other land in this county, and also owns land in Iowa.  He is now dealing in sewing-machines, and is special collector for Southern Ohio.  Mrs. Tucker is a member of the Methodist church.  Mr. Tucker’s father, Nathan Tucker, was born in Maryland in 1814, and is now living on fraction 33, Rome Township.  His mother, Barbara A. Tucker, was born in Somerset County, Penn., in 1805.  She first married Joseph Tedrow.  He died in 1833, leaving six children—Henry, Silas, Aaron, Joseph, Freeman and SusanAaron died in 1865.  Freeman is a resident of Ohio; the others are living in Iowa.  Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Tucker are members of the Methodist church.
SOURCE:  History of Hocking Valley, Ohio - Published Chicago: by Inter-State Publishing Co. - 1883 - Page 600

JOHN A. TULLIS, editor of the Nelsonville News, was born Nov. 11, 1836, near Donnellville, Clarke Co., O.  His father was a farmer in the moderate circumstances, keeping his son on the farm with him.  In 1844 the family removed to Champaign County, O., still remaining on a farm.  His father being unable to send him to college, young Tullis obtained what education he could at the public schools.  He afterward attended a seminary in Clarke County, but was not able to continue until completing the course.  When he became a man,  his health being delicate he decided to go into a life of business.  He consequently engaged in the followed for a number of years, as long as his health permitted, wholesale produce shipping to New York and Philadelphia markets.  The last four years he was in this business he was located at St. Paris, O., where he was also engaged in the printing business.  When he retired from business there, he came to Nelsonville and established his paper, on which he has worked faithfully ever since.  Great credit is due to his perseverance and good management, as he is the first man who succeeded in permanently establishing a newspaper in Nelsonville, although numerous attempts had been made.  He has well maintained the reputation of his profession, by endeavoring to infuse new and animated life in his fellow citizens.  He has advocated public and private improvements, and it is not at all improbably that some of this seed has fallen in good soil, since at no time  in the town's history has the progress of improvement been so great as at the present time.
     He was married to Miss Susan E. Deaton, of Addison, Champaign County, Mar. 31, 1859.  Of this union there are three children, all daughters and all living - Addie A. was born Feb. 5, 1860; Anna V., Apr. 23, 1875, and Mabel, Apr. 5, 1878.
Source:  History of Hocking Valley, Ohio, Publ. Chicago: by Inter-State Publishing Co., 1883 - Page 434

 

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