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Fayette County,
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BIOGRAPHIES
* Source #1:  History of Fayette County, Ohio
Indianapolis, Ind. : B.F. Bowen & Co., 1914
Source #2 - History of Fayette County, Ohio & State of Ohio
By R. S. Dills - Publ. Odell & Meyer Publishers, Dayton, Ohio - 1881
(Unless otherwise noted)

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H. L. HADLEY (Union Twp.)

 

SAMUEL HAINESJoseph Haines, the grandfather of Samuel Haines, was a native of Warren County, Virginia.  He was the father of Nathan, Joseph, Vinson, Ebenezer, and Samuel.
     Ebenezer
married Rebecca Berry, of Virginia, and to this union twelve children, including this subject, were born.  Their marriage took place February, 1799.  Their children were born as follows:  Mary, 1800; Ann, 1801; Elizabeth, 1802; Susanna, 1805; Rebecca, 1807; Sidney 1809; Joseph, 1811; Nathan, 1813; Sarah, 1816; James, 1818; Beulah,, 1820; and Samuel, Nov. 18, 1822.
     Ebenezer settled in Perry Township, about the year 1816, and on the same lands now occupied by his son Samuel.  He paid $6. and acre for it at that time.  Ebenezer died Sept. 13, 1850, aged eighty years; his wife died Feb., 1846, aged sixty five years.
     Francis Berry, the maternal grandfather of our subject, served in the war of the revolution, and died in Kentucky.
     The early education of Mr. Haines was more a matter of muscle than of brains, and much ore of his time was given to clearing away the forest than to storing the mind with book knowledge.  With all these disadvantages our subject obtained a rudimentary education.  He mentions John Moon, Colby Chew, and Isaac Woodward as his early teachers.
     He was married Dec. 27, 1849, to Maria Smith, second daughter of Francis and Charlotte (Cochran) Smith, natives of Virginia and New Jersey respectively, but residents of Ohio.  The Smiths came to Ohio from Virginia in 1820.  Francis and Charlotte Smith had seven children, born as follows: Sarah 1826; Maria, 1827; Anderson, 1830; Harriet, 1832; Charlotte, 1835; Henry, 1837; Elizabeth, 1839; John, 1840.
     Mrs. Haines (Maria Smith) was born Feb. 27, 1827.  To Samuel and Maria Haines nine children have been born: Albert Berry, born Nov. 15, 1850; married Worthington, and lives in Perry Township.  Martha Ella, born Nov. 13, 1852. Henry Lewis, born Jan. 1, 1855; married Etta Belle Borum, of Clinton County, Oct. 4, 1877.  Francis Marion, born June 17, 1857; married Alvaretta Jones, of Green Township, Aug. 10, 1881.  James Edward, born June 30, 1860; married Nancy C. Worthington, of Green Township, Aug. 10, 1881.  William Addison, born July 23, 1863.  Belle Ann, born Aug. 9, 1865.  Charles Milton born Feb. 21, 1869,  Mary Eva, born Sept. 19, 1871.  The father and all his children were born in the same house in which the family now resides.
     Mr. Haines has accumulated a competency by honest, hard labor, and well directed, legitimate trade.  He owns five hundred and thirty acres of land in Perry Township, and has all in a good state of cultivation.  His daughter, Martha Ellen, has attained distinction as a teacher.
Source #2 - Page 806 - Perry Twp.
(SHARON WICK's NOTE:  This biographical transcription was requested by Nathan Haines of Portland, OR )
E. C. HAMILTON (Union Twp.)

 

WILLIAM H. HAMMER (Union Twp.)

 

JOSEPH S. HARRIS (Union Twp.)

 

GENERAL BATTEAL HARRISON was born in Warfield, Virginia, in 1780. His father's name was Benjamin, a cousin to the father of W. H. Harrison, whose name was also Benjamin. Batteal's father was a soldier in the Revolution, fought under Washington ; was a descendant of the illustrious Benjamin Harrison, who led the army of Cromwell in his long and bloody struggle. When quite a child Batteal and his parents started for the wilds of Kentucky. While waiting at his aunt's, in Wheeling, where they were to take the boat, she prevailed upon his parents, on account of the great danger from Indians, to leave the boy with her until the family were located and the danger had subsided. Two years after they returned for him, but he had become so attached to her that he refused to leave her ; they even undertook to force him to accompany them, but she persuaded them to let him stay and they returned without him, and he remained with her until he was grown to be a man. Wishing to see his parents he started, first going to St. Clairsville, Ohio, then to Chillicothe, where, learning that his mother was dead, he abandoned the idea of going to Kentucky, recruited a company and entered the war of 1812, during which, in 1812 or 1813, he married Miss Elizabeth Scott, daughter of Dr. Joseph Scott, of Chillicothe, and after the war, in 1815, removed to the north fork of Paint Creek and settled on a tract of land located by John A. Fulton on a warrant obtained by the services of his father in the revolutionary war, and which during his (Batteal's) services in 1812, he employed Fulton to enter on the best vacant land, and by reason of his failure to do so, he sued him for breach of contract and recovered heavy damages. This tract of land was situated in Madison Township, on the north fork of Paint Creek near the center of the township on the Columbus pike, now occupied in part by Sheffelbarker. There were one thousand and forty acres in this body. He also owned six hundred acres not far from it and other pieces amounting in the aggregate to about two thousand two hundred acres.
     He was one of the most prominent men in the county ; served gloriously in the war of 1812 (which see), was elected one of the earliest associate justices of the court, at first a colonel, then commissioned a brigadier general of the home militia, and served several terms in the legislature, during which the following anecdote is related of him:
     Harrison had one failing ; honest and upright in all things, he had a strong liking for whisky. While he was a member of the legislature, and during a session of the same, Judge Green, then of Chillicothe but now a resident of Columbus, and also a member of  the legislative body, introduced a bill which provided for the employment of a corps of men who were to make a geological survey of the state. Harrison opposed the measure, giving as his reasons that the general condition of the state and her inhabitants did not justify the commencement of the work at that time. It was discovered by the friends of the bill that it could not be passed unless Harrison was induced to alter his opinion regarding it. Green proposed that five or six of them meet in his room on a certain evening, Harrison was to be invited and liquor was to be furnished in abundance. On the appointed evening all the parties, including Harrison, met at Judge Green's rooms. After the guests had imbibed pretty freely of the liquor, the possibility of passing the "geological survey bill" was discussed and Harrison was importuned to use his influence in its support. The latter when driven to the wall would say : "Let's have another round of Judge Green's good whisky." His request was complied with several times in quick succession. Finally all the occupants of the room became very drunk, Harrison being more sober than his companions. Again they requested him earnestly to come over to their side of the question, to which he replied : "Well, General Green, let's have a little more of your whisky and then I'll talk about the 'geological survey.'" The bottle was passed; he took another drink and said : "Gentlemen, this is excellent whisky, and it is certainly very kind in General Green in supplying us with such a good article, but I will see you all eternally d—d before I will vote for that bill."
     General Harrison lost his wife in 1851, he following in 1857. Three sons and one daughter are still living. William lives in Washington, this county ; Benjamin, in Madison, Ohio, and David in Missouri. Their sister married Thomas Vance, still survives as his widow, and lives on a portion of the original tract owned by her father. John J., the youngest son, participated in the rebellion and died at Augusta, Georgia. Scott, captain of a regiment in the One Hundred and Fourteenth Ohio Volunteer Infantry, died in S ____ County, Missouri, October, 1878.
(Source: History of Fayette Co.., Ohio - Dayton, Ohio: Odell & Mayer, 1881)

D. M. HAYS (Union Twp.)

 

JAMES HAYS, a native of Virginia, came to Kentucky in an early day, where he was wedded to Letta Rankins. In the first days of this century, the family came to the mouth of Big Belly, Pickaway County, and presumably in 1805 to this county. They settled on a two hundred acre tract in Paint Township. The sight is now owned by Charles Hays. Three of his sons were in the war of 1812. When the family first effected a settlement, there was no habitation between their humble cabin and Frankfort (then called Oldtown). Hays died in 1850. The family consisted of twelve children, of which Benjamin, the youngest, alone is now living. Mr. Hays was township trustee for a number of years.
(Source: History of Fayette Co.., Ohio - Dayton, Ohio: Odell & Mayer, 1881)
EPHRAIM HENKLE (Union Twp.)

 

MICHAEL HERBERT (Union Twp.)

 

BOMEN HESS (Union Twp.)

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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