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CHARLES
M. DAVENPORT is a very well known citizen of Greenville and
belongs to a family that has done much for Darke county, having been
identified with its interests for many years. He is a member
of an old and honored family and his first ancestor to come to
America was Abraham Davenport. He was born in England in 1714,
married Mary Sims, and had the following eight children: Anthony
Sims, Andrew, Samuel Marmaduke, Elizabeth, Stephen, Abraham and
John. Anthony Sims, the eldest, born in 1757,
married Mary Bozzle and they became parents of eight children, viz:
Abraham, Ira, John, Wesley, Mary, Nancy, Sarah and Willa
Minor. Of these, Abraham, born about 1785, is in
direct line to the subject of this sketch. He married Penelope
Griffith and they had eight children: Anthony Sims (2), Dr.
Smith, John, Benjamin, Ira, Robert, Celina and Elizabeth.
The second Anthony Sims Davenport was grandfather of
Charles M. Davenport.
Anthony Sims Davenport, born May 16, 1813, died
Jan. 19, 1880, lived in Shelby county, Ohio, married Nancy Coon,
Jan. 8, 1835, and they had six children, as follows:
Elizabeth, born Feb. 25, 1836, married James Malcolm; Martha
M., born Dec. 4, 1837, married Hiram Lenox; John Wesley,
born Oct. 27, 1839; David, born July 23, 1841; Frances,
born July 5, 1843, wife of James Wood; Finley, born Sep.
2, 1845, died while serving in the Union army. Mrs. Nancy
Davenport died Jan.3, 1846, and Anthony Sims Davenport
married Betsy M. Clintock, Feb. 23, 1847, by whom he had
three children. Sarah and Edward died when they
were about two years old, and Charles P., born March 20,
1851, now a resident of Shelby county, Ohio, near the old home farm,
who married Margaret Cecil and have four children,
Floyd, a resident of Bisbee, Arizona; Owen, employed by a
mining company in Central America; Eva, wife of Dr. Fred
Clark, of Sidney, Ohio, and Bonnie, a school teacher, who
lives at home.
James and Elizabeth Malcolm have
five children, Lucy, wife of Prof. A. W. Gamble, of
Logansport, Ind.; Clara, wife of Daniel Price, of
Piqua, Ohio; Cora, wife of Grant Patten, living near
Piqua; Harper, of Medarysville, Ind., and Nannie, wife
of William Bowen, near Sidney, Ohio. James and
Frances Wood have two sons, Edward and Arthur,
live in Cleveland, Ohio. David married Sadie
McVay and has two sons and an adopted daughter. Rev.
Charles Russell, of the Methodist Episcopal Church, has served
the church at Swanton, Ohio, for the past nine years; Benjamin
lives in Cleveland, and Lillie lives with her mother in
Piqua, Ohio. David served in the Union army and was
shot through the right arm.
John Wesley Davenport was born in Shelby county,
Ohio, Oct. 27, 1839, and died Jan. 27, 1909, in Darke county, being
berried at Shook's Chapel cemetery in Wabash township.
He was a farmer practically his entire life and was a Republican in
politics, holding such township offices as supervisor and trustee.
He and his wife were members of the Methodist Episcopal Church and
he was trustee of the church known as Shook's Chapel.
On Mar. 18, 1862, he married Melvina Heffleman, who was born
in Clay township, Montgomery county, Ohio, on Aug. 20, 1840, and now
resides on the home farm in Wabash township. Melvina (Heffleman)
Davenport is a daughter of John and Susan (Oldum)
Heffleman. John Heffleman was born Jan. 11, 1810,
in Milford township, Miflin county, Pennsylvania, died in Shelby
county, Ohio, in 1894; he was the third son of Frederic Augustus
and Barbara (Hartman) Heffleman. Frederic H. was
born Oct. 3, 1778 in Philadelphia county, Pennsylvania, and died
Jan. 26, 1862. After marriage, John Wesley Davenport
moved on a farm near Jonesborough, Grant county, Indiana, and in
March, 1881, returned to Darke county, Ohio, located on a farm in
Wabash township, and there spent his remaining years, carrying on
the work of his farm until he was ready to retire from active life.
He was a much respected citizen, standing well in the community and
having many friends. He and his wife had five children, all
born while they were residing in Grant county, Indiana; William
Heffleman, born Dec. 10, 1863, living on a farm in Wabash
township, adjoining his mother; Franklin S., born Mar. 15,
1867, died Nov. 19, 1895, and is buried at Shook's Chapel;
Charles M., born Oct. 11, 1869, in Grant county, Indiana;
Lillie, born Sept. 12, 1875, died in infancy; Grace, born
Jan. 8, 1878, died Oct. 6, 1895, shortly before her brother,
Franklin, who is buried by her side.
William Heffleman Davenport
married Miss Anna Supinger, June 16, 1887, and they have five
children: Walter, living on a farm in Wabash township
adjoining his father, married Miss Clara McKibben and they
have one child, Helen. Susie, at home, teaches
music in the neighborhood; Homer, Treva and Paul
at home. Charles M. Davenport received a common school
education in the rural schools, supplemented by the course in
Versailles high school, then attended the Centennial Commercial
College at Greenville, Ohio, where he fitted himself for Commercial
life. He began business life as a stenographer in the office
of the Henry St. Clair Company, wholesale grocers, at
Greenville, and subsequently took charge of their books. He
has developed into an expert book-keeper and has held this position
with the above named company since 1894. He is progressive and
enterprising in his ideas and is a valuable employe of the concern,
his efficiency and worth being recognized and appreciated by his
employers. He is a member of the Knights of Pythias and served
as Chancellor Commander in 1908. He is very fond of his home
and is rather quiet and retiring in his tastes. He is closely
devoted to his business but finds considerable time to devote to
church work and is interested in everything which he thinks will
work out to the benefit of the city, county or state. He is a
model citizen and ready to do his duty in all ways. His
friends will be gratified to learn that he wrote a greater part of
the chapter on the Methodist Church found in Volume I of this work,
which will be read by all with much interest. Mr. Davenport
is fond of reading and study and keeps up with the events and
issues of the day. He is wide-awake and practical and has a
comprehensive idea of business and commercial affairs. In 1899
he built the present comfortable family home on East Fifth street
and has made many changes and improvements since.
On June 25, 1896, Mr. Davenport was united in
marriage with Miss Dora B. Ditmer, born Jan. 9, 1869, near
Georgetown, Miami County, Ohio, daughter of Henry Warner
and Brittania (Searle) Ditmer and spent her girlhood in
Monroe township, Darke county, Ohio.
Mr. Ditmer was born in Lancaster county,
Pennsylvania, in 1831, and died Nov. 3, 1898, being buried at
Georgetown, Miami county. His wife was born in Champaign
county, Ohio, Feb. 18, 1848, and died Mar. 23, 1905. Henry
Warner Ditmer was a son of John Ditmer, born in Lancaster
county, Pennsylvania, in 1789, who married Susanna Warner,
born Nov. 9, 1796, in the same county. John and
Susanna Ditmer had thirteen children: Jacob,
born in Pennsylvania, Nov. 23, 1814; Elizabeth, born Aug. 28,
1816, wife of John Falkner, now deceased, who formerly
lived near Philipsburg, Montgomery County, Ohio; John,
deceased, born Jan. 11, 1819; Rosanna, deceased, was born
Dec. 15, 1820, and married Joseph Carroll; Mary, born
Nov. 21, 1822, married Matthias Spiler; Abraham, born Aug.
15, 1824; David, born Apr. 15, 1827; Elias, born Apr.
19, 1829; Henry, father of Mrs. Davenport;
Catherine, born Dec. 23, 1833, wife of George Fry,
of Darke county, Ohio; George, born Apr. 15, 1836;
Benjamin, born Jan. 24, 1839; Levi, born March 30, 1841.
John Ditmer, father of these children, died April 3,
1854.
Henry Warner Ditmer was a farmer by occupation
and spent most of his life in Darke county. He enlisted in the
Seventy-first Ohio Volunteer Infantry for three years during the
Civil War and served in many important battles. He was
Democrat in political principle but took no active part in political
affairs. He and his wife had ten children, two born in Miami
county and eight in Monroe township, Darke county: Dora B.,
born Jan. 9, 1869; Luella, born Jan. 27, 1871, married
Calvin Litten and they live on a farm near Philipsburg,
Montgomery county; Charles R., born Apr. 22, 1873, lives
south of Greenville; Lawrence S., born Sept. 30, 1875, lives
near Potsdam; Noah W., born Dec. 29, 1877, lives near West
Milton, Ohio; Amanda, born Oct. 15, 1880, married Samuel
A. Bridenbaugh and they live on a farm near West Milton;
Edward H., born Aug. 11, 1882, lives on a farm near Potsdam;
Cora, wife of Henry Timmons, living at Potsdam, Ohio, was
born Sept. 24, 1885; one child died in infancy; Mina Ethel,
born Apr. 19, 1890, married Charles Macy and they live near
Philipsburg, Ohio. The parents were members of the Mennonite
church.
Mr. and Mrs. Davenport have two children:
Gladys G., born Mar. 14, 1897. In May 1914, she graduated
from Greenville high school and will enter the Ohio Wesleyan
University in September, 1914, to prepare herself for a teacher of
English; Harold Ditmer, born Jun. 17, 1900, will be a
sophomore in the Greenville high school during the year commencing
September, 1914. Mr. and Mrs. Davenport are devoted
memers of the Methodist Episcopal church of Greenville. He has
served as superintendent of the Sunday school since 1900, having
previously been assistant superintendent and secretary. He has
been financial secretary of the church for some time and is also a
trustee. Mrs. Davenport has been president and
secretary of the Ladies' Aid Society and both have done very
valuable work in the interest of the same. They are both
anxious that their children shall have every educational advantage
possible and have been economical and self-sacrificing in past years
to build up their present prosperity and standing. |
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JOHN W.
DEARDOURFF, manufacturer and dealer in boots and shoes, No.
13, Third street, Greenville. The subject of this memoir is a
native of Preble Co., born June 3, 1845; he is a son of Daniel
Deardourff, who was born in Adams Co., Penn., and came to Preble
Co. about the year 1849. He married Elizabeth Stouffer;
she was born in Lancaster Co., Penn., and is now living in
Greenville, at the advanced age of 79 years. John W.
was raised in Preble Co. until 20 years of age, during which time he
attended the common schools, and learned and worked at the
shoemaker's trade, which he followed until August, 1862, at which
date he enlisted in the 50th O. V. I., and went forward to battle
for the Union; he was in many severe engagements, among which was
the battle of Perryville, and in the three months' campaign against
Atlanta, during which time he was engaged some eighty-four days;
after the capture of Atlanta, he returned to Franklin, and after the
battle of the latter place, the army fell back to Nashville, where
he was engaged in the three days' fight; in the spring of 1865, he
joined Sherman at Goldsboro, and was with his army at the
surrender of Johnson; he then lay in Salisbury some thirty
days, then returned to City Point and Baltimore; thence to
Cleveland, where he received his discharge, in the latter part of
July, 1865, having served in the Union army three yeas. Upon
receiving his discharge, he came to Darke Co. and was employed at
his trade until the spring of 1877, when he engaged in business for
himself, which he has since successfully followed; a card of his
business is to be found in the business directory of Greenville, in
another part of this work; they have two children - Harry A.
and Charles.
~Page 486 - History of Darke County, Ohio -
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THE DENISE
FAMILY is one of the most prominent of the sturdy pioneer
families of Darke county. They came from Butler county, Ohio, in the
autumn of 1832 and settled on a tract of one hundred acres of land
west of Greenville, a mile from the city hall and on the Union City
pike. At that time the family consisted of the father, John S.
Denise, who was born in New Jersey, in 1803; his wife, who bore
the maiden name of Margaret M. Clark, was of Irish
descent, and was born in Warren county, Ohio, in August, 1804; and
their three children: William, born May 13, 1824; Aaron,
January 16, 1825, and Eleanor, July 16, 1830. At that early
period there were only about a dozen houses in Greenville, and the
Union City pike was only an Indian trail extending as far as
Hillgrove. There were two or three houses and a tanyard at the
latter place, but Union City had not been founded. While the
determined couple were laboring to build for themselves a home in
the wilderness, where Indians, bears, wolves and wild-cats abounded
and now and then the screams of the panther were heard, five more
children were added to the family circle, and seven of the eight
children grew to mature years. William married Miss
Catherine Garber, and after her death wedded Louisa
McClain. By their union there were six children, four of whom
are living and reside with their parents in Dayton, Ohio. Eleanor
became the wife of R. B. Farra, by whom she had four
children, two yet living. Mr. Farra served for two
years in the Mexican war, and for nine months in the civil war.
Charlotte is the wife of John S. Vantilburg, and of their
ten children four yet survive. Margaret is the wife of
Elijah McConnell and the mother of two children. She and her
family reside at the corner of Fifth and Devor streets in
Greenville, Ohio. Jennie, Obadiah and Aaron
always made their home with their parents.
The older children were sixteen and eighteen years of
age before any school-houses were built in that section of the
country, so the education obtained from textbooks was very limited.
Nature, however, taught them the most essential lessons at that
period, the preservation of life. When the farmers wanted to take
their meager wheat crop to mill it was necessary to drive to
Franklin, Warren county, or to Piqua, to have it ground. Their corn
was taken to Coletown, where Samuel Cole, the father
of Joseph Cole, who lives near Nashville, operated an
old burr mill, now known as the Weimer mill, run by Mathias Dean.
The customer was obliged to wait a whole clay for his grist, and
while the miller attended to the grinding the farmer had to watch
below so that the hounds, which were numerous in every household,
would not eat the meal as fast as it was ground. Many times when the
father was too busy to ride to mill the mother went to the field,
gathered some ears of corn and grated them to make mush or bread for
her family. They tell of a voice crying around their lonely cabin
one dark night and what an effort it required to keep Aaron
from going out to the relief of the helpless woman, as he supposed
it was. The man says with a perceptible nervousness even St this
late day, "It would have been all up with me if I had, because the
cry was that of a hungry panther."
The greater part of the Denise farm was at that
time swamp land. The cabin of one room was built of logs and had no
floor or chimney, while coverlets of the mother's own spinning
served for doors and windows. Corn at that time was worth eight
cents a bushel and wheat forty cents a bushel. Everything was
primitive. Mrs. Margaret McConnell now tells of
a fright that she and her sister Jennie experienced when they
were quite young. Having stolen a watermelon they quietly made their
way into the cornfield to eat it unobserved, when they suddenly came
upon a big black bear.
Loyal to the country which the family had helped to
transform from the wilderness into homes of comparative peace and
plenty, the two sons, Obadiah and Aaron, answered the
call for volunteers at the beginning of the civil war. Aaron
enlisted in the Fortieth Ohio Infantry in August, 1861, and served
with the company for three years, after which he was transferred to
the Fifty-first Ohio Infantry, where he remained until the close of
the war, his services therefore covering more than three years. He
bean as a memento of his army experience a shattered thumb. On one
occasion he had his arm raised to shoot when a rebel ball fired from
the side of Lookout mountain broke the gun to pieces in his hand and
injured his thumb. He was never arrested or in the guard house, and
was in the hospital only for one week, On one occasion during his
four years service he visited home, receiving a twenty-seven days
furlough. Obadiah enlisted on the 2d of August,1862, in the
Ninety-fourth Ohio Infantry, where he served for nine months, when
he was transferred to the One Hundred and Fifty-second Ohio
Regiment, and from the latter was honorably discharged on the 2d of
September, 1864, owing to physical disability. He was in the
hospital for only a few days, preferring exposure to the close
hospital air.
The father of these children died April 25, 1852, and
on the 24th of January, 1884, thirty-two years later, the mother
also passed to the home beyond. In that year Obadiah and
Aaron rented the farm, comprising one hundred acres of as good
land as can be found in Darke county, and with their sister
Jennie retired from active business life. On the 4th of August,
1897, the sister died upon the farm where she was born and had
always lived. On the 7th of October of the same year the brothers
and their sister, Mrs. Eleanor Farra, who had
been a widow for some years, and had returned to the old home,
removed to No. 618 East Third street, in Greenville, where they are
now living in the enjoyment of a well-earned rest. |
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JOHN DEVOR.
John Devor was born in Pennsylvania and came to Darke
county in 1808. He died in Greenville in the year 1828. He and one
Rachel Armstrong entered the first half-section of land
within the present limits of the county, being the west half of
section 35, township 12, range 2 east, and laid out the town of
Greenville in 1810. The legislature of Ohio, in session at
Zanesville, by their act of January 3, 1809, created the county of
Darke out of the territory previously forming a part of the county
of Miami and, within a year afterward, a commission appointed by the
legislature established the seat of justice of the newly formed
county at Terry's, town of Greenville, north of Greenville creek;
but there being some dissatisfaction, it may be well to state that
by the enactment of the legislature at its session of 1810-11 a new
commission was created, to whom was confided the duty of relocating
the seat of justice of the county. This commission consisted of two
members from Miami county and one from Preble. and after considering
the proposition of Terry, Briggs, and that of Devor
and Mrs. Armstrong, and looking to the material benefits to
the county, as proffered by the parties, accepted the proposition of
Devor and Mrs. Armstrong, and selected as the future
county seat the town laid out at Wayne's old fort of Greenville. The
accepted proposition covenanted to donate to the county one-third of
all the town lots then laid out, or that they or their heirs might
thereafter lay out, on the adjoining lands in the west half of said
section 35, in which their town plat was located. Some years after,
Mrs. Armstrong having died in the meantime, Devor, for
himself, and on behalf of the heirs of Mrs. Armstrong,
pursuant to: the order of the court of common pleas, executed their
contract so far as the lots then laid off was concerned, by
conveying to the commissioners of Miami county in trust for the
county of Darke, when it should thereafter be organized, thirty-two
of the ninety-six lots then laid out, but, although additional town
lots on the adjacent land of the half-section have since been laid
out by the heirs of Devor, and also by the heirs of Mrs.
Armstrong, no further donation or conveyance has ever been made,
nor have the commissioners of Darke county ever demanded or required
any further performance of their covenant. John Devor's son,
James, was born near Maysville, Kentucky, while their family
were on their way from Pennsylvania, in 1795. He learned surveying
from his father and for a number of years was county surveyor of
Darke county. He was the first auditor of Darke county, from May,
1844, to October, 1847, lie was county treasurer, and for a number
of years was a justice of: the peace; he died in October, 1855. His
wife, Patience Dean, was a daughter of Aaron Dean, one
of the early settlers of the county. They were married March 1,.
1828, and ten children were born unto them, of whom five now
survive, John and Elijah being prominent attorneys of the
Greenville bar, the latter being also a referee in bankruptcy, under
the late United States bankruptcy law. John Devor is a
prominent-politician, an unswerving Republican and a warm personal
friend of Hon. John Sherman. He was the Republican elector
for the fourth congressional district in 1888 and had the honor of
casting his vote for Hon. Benjamin Harrison for president of
the United States. |
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DANIEL
LAKEN DRILL. This well-known citizen of Darke County,
who departed this life in 1883, was for many years actively
identified with the development and upbuilding of Greenville
township, where he made his home. He was born on the 14th of
August, 1814, in Frederick county, Maryland, where the family was
founded at an early day by two brothers Jacob and George
Drill, natives of Germany. Jacob afterward removed
to Virginia. So far as known all the Drills in America
are descendants of these two. The first fourteen years of his
life our subject spent in his native state and then came to Ohio
with his parents, George and Jemima (Laken) Drill,
also natives of Maryland, who settled on Stillwater river, north of
Dayton, in Montgomery county, where the father cleared and improved
a farm and where both he and his wife died.
Our subject was reared and educated in the usual manner
of boys of his day and on reaching manhood he married Miss Ann
Kiler, daughter of Daniel and Ellen (Lowe) Kiler, also
natives of Maryland. By this union were born six
children, namely: Ellen and Urith both deceased;
Daniel K., who is mentioned below; John H. and George
M., both deceased; and Rebecca, who resides on the old
homestead with her brother, Daniel K.
Mr. Drill continued his residence in Montgomery
county until 1853, when he purchased one hundred and sixty acres of
land in Greenville township, Darke county, to which he moved his
family on the 17th of March of that year. There was a small
log cabin standing on the place, but only three acres of the land
had been cleared, the remainder being timber and swamp land.
It seemed a herculean task to clear and improve this place, but
perseverance and energy won, and the land was transformed into a
highly cultivated and productive farm. Mr. Drill began
life here with a small capital, but he met with success in his
farming operations, and became one of the prosperous and substantial
men of his community, as well as one of its highly respected and
honored citizens. He was somewhat reserved in manner, always
attending strictly to his own business. He was conservative in
his judgment and his decisions were all the result of a careful
process of reasoning. Religiously he was a member of the
Episcopal church, his father being one of the founders of that
church in Montgomery county, and always an active worker in the
same. Mrs. Drill died in 1873, at the age of fifty-nine
years. Like her husband, she had many warm friends in the
community where they made their home, and was held in high regard by
all who know her.
Daniel K. Drill, son of our subject, was born in
Montgomery county, April 2, 1843, and was educated in the public
schools. He assisted his father in the arduous task of
clearing and improving the farm, and is still living on the old
homestead, successfully engaged in agricultural pursuits. He
married Miss Margaret E. Kilbourn, a daughter of Thomas F.
and Margaret (Martin) Kilbourn, who came to Darke county about
1830 and settled on a farm in Greenville township adjoining the
Drill homestead. Her father was born in Marietta, Ohio, in
1801, but was reared in Vermont. He died in January, 1882, his
wife in June, 1890. Both were active members of the Episcopal
church of Greenville, of which Mr. Kilbourn was one of the
founders, and his picture, in honor of his virtues, has always
adorned the walls of the parsonage at that place. Of his three
children, Clarissa and Martin are both deceased, so
that Mrs. Drill, the youngest of the family, is the only one
now living. She is a most estimable lady, and is a member of
the Universalist church of Greenville. Mr. and Mrs. Drill
were married, May 29, 1873, and have become the parents of five
children, namely: Anna M., Frank K., William E., Daniel C.
and Hazel, all of whom are living. |
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