L


OHIO GENEALOGY EXPRESS

 

Welcome to
Harrison County, Ohio

BIOGRAPHIES

   
 

ANDREW PALMER was born in the State of New York on the 10th of Oct., 1850, and he was ten years old when he was sent from the old Empire commonwealth to Tuscarawas County, Ohio, where he was made the adopted son of David and Mary Magdaline (Temper) Palmer, in whose home he was reared to manhood, the while he was afforded the advantages of the public schools, his foster parents having in the meanwhile established their home on a farm in Harrison County.  He remained with his foster father until his marriage, in the year 1872, and he then engaged i independent farm enterprise in Nottingham Township, whence he later removed to Washington Township, where he farmed two years.  He then returned to Nottingham Township, where he has since continued his activities as a substantial agriculturist and stock-grower and where he owns an excellent farm of eighty-three acres.  He is loyal to all civic responsibilities, is a republican in politics and he and his wife hold membership in Bethel Chapel (Methodist Episcopal) in their home township.
     On the 4th of July, 1872, was solemnized the marriage of Mr. Palmer to Miss Rachel Yarnall who was born in Tuscarawas County, Ohio, Sept. 16, 1851, a daughter of Aaron and Harriet (Poulson) YarnallAaron Yarnall was born Nov. 12, 1815, a son of Aaron and Mary Ann (Bell) Yarnall, and Mrs. Harriet (Poulson) Yarnall was born May 26, 1813, a daughter of James and Elizabeth PoulsonAaron Yarnall, father of Mrs. Palmer, came to Harrison County about the year 1857, and engaged in farming in Nottingham Township.  He and his wife passed the residue of their lives in this county, and both were earnest members of the Methodist Episcopal Church.  The became the parents of ten children, whose names and respective years of birth are here recorded:  Elizabeth, 1837; James, 1839; Ziba, 1841; John, 1843; Eli, 1845; Sarah Jane, 1847; George, 1849; Rachel, 1851; Asbury, 1854; and William 1855 (died in infancy).  Aaron Yarnall, Sr.,  grandfather of Mrs. Palmer, was born in Washington County, Pennsylvania, in 1783, and in 181 he came with his family to Harrison County, Ohio, where he purchased 160 acres of land in Nottingham Township and became a pioneer farmer.  Here he remained until his death in 1851, and his widow passed away in 1857, both having been active members of the Methodist Episcopal Church.  They had nine children, namely: Ziba, William, Aaron, Eli, Colver, John, Nelson, Lydia and Mary A.
     Mr. and Mrs. Palmer
became the parents of  eight children: John M. is a farmer in Nottingham Township; William T. is individually mentioned o other pages of this work; Hattie died in early childhood; Alice M. is the wife of James Walker; Bertha R. is the wife of Joseph B. Rogers; Mary is the wife of Elmer Tarbett; and Harry and Wesley are still members of the parental home circle.

JOHN M. PALMER was born in Nottingham Township, Harrison County, on the 27th of May, 1873.  He gained his early education in the district schools of this township, and is now numbered among its substantial and progressive exponents of farm industry.  He is a son of Andrew Palmer, of whom specific mentioned whom specific mentioned is made on other pages, with due record concerning the family history.  At the age of Andrew Palmer, of whom specific mention is made on other pages, with due record concerning the family history.  At the age of sixteen years John M. Palmer began his independent career by obtaining employment as a farm hand, and he continued to be thus engaged for several years.  After his marriage he established himself upon his present farm, which comprised 110 acres at the time when he purchased the property, in 1901, but to which he has since added until he now has a well improved and valuable farm property of 186 3/4 acres of which 160 acres constitute the home place, the remaining acreage likewise being in Nottingham Township.  Virorous work and good management have brought cumulative success to Mr. Palmer in his independent activities as an agriculturist and grower of live stock, and he is one of the substantial and popular citizens of his native township, where he served two years as township assessor.  He hold membership in the Bethel Chapel of the Methodist Episcopal Church in the home township.
     On the 26th of October, 1904, was solemnized the marriage of Mr. Palmer to Miss Cora E. Walker, daughter of L. P. and Elizabeth (Adams) Walker, of Notthingham Township, and the supreme bereavement in his life came when his devoted wife was summoned to eternal rest.  She was an earnest member of the Methodist Episcopal Church, and her death occurred on the 19th of August 1919.  She is survived by two children - Denver Lewis, who was born Nov. 15, 1906, and Helen Elizabeth, who was born Dec. 26, 1911.

ROBERT PENMAN PALMER, son of Charles W. Palmer, of Monroe Township, Harrison County, through a resident of Dennison deserves mention in this record as one of the gallant soldiers of Harrison County in the World war.  He was with the Forty-second or Rainbow Division. 
     He was born at the home of his parents in Monroe Township Sept. 8, 1897.  He was not yet twenty years of age when he volunteered and enlisted Apr. 17, 1917, at Dennison, Ohio.  He received his early training at Camp Perry, being assigned to Company K of the old Fourth Ohio Regiment in the Thirty-seventh Division.  Aug. 16, 1817, he was transferred to Company H of the One Hundred Sixty-sixth Infantry of the Forty-second or Rainbow Division.  October 8, 1917, he left Hoboken, New York, on the "Peoria" for France, landing at Brest, and after some intensive training with the Rainbow Division he was placed on the Luneville sector from March 11 to 22, 1918; Bacarat sector March 25 to June 20th; on the Champagne-Marne defensive from July 15th to July 18th; took part in the Aisne-Marne offensive from July 27th to August 3rd; was in the Saint Mihiel campaign from September 12th to 16th: in the Woevre sector from Sept. 25th to 30th; and in the Meuse-Argonne battles from Oct. 10 to Nov. 7, 1918.  June 18, 1918, he was gassed and hit by shrapnel, and was in hospital recovering from these injuries three weeks.  During his service he was in France, Belgium, Luxemburg, Germany, and was with the Army of Occupation in Germany for six months.
     In April, 1919, he left France on the Leviathan, landing at New York April 29th, and received his honorable discharge at Camp Sherman, May 16, 1919, more than two years after his enlistment. 
     June 3, 1919, Robert Penman Palmer married Gladys Cable of Dennison, daughter of Lee and Callie Cable.

THOMAS A. PALMER has shown no indirection or lack of initiative energy in his long and successful career as one of the representative farmers of his native county, and though now advanced in years he still resides upon his old home farm in North Township, Harrison County, the place having comprised 140 acres until the spring of 1919, when he relieved himself of the cares of managing the entire place by selling ninety-two acres, so that he retains at the present time a farm of forty-eight acres and is giving his attention principally to growing apples.  He is a man of marked mentality, is genial and affable, ahs lived a life of uprightness and producive toil, and no citizens more secure vantage-place in popular confidence and good will.
     Mr. Palmer was born in Archer Township, this county, on the 28th of October, 1849, and is a son of Adam and Catherine (Shirey) Palmer, both natives of Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, where the former was born in Dec., 1812, and the latter on the 11th of Jan., 1816, she having been a daughter of John and Rachel Shirey.  Adam Palmer's parents, Jacob and Hannah (Archibald) Palmer, came from the old Keystone State of Ohio in the early pioneer days and were numbered among the first permanent settlers is Stock Township, Harrison County, where they established their home in 1814 and where the father reclaimed a farm from the forest wilds.  Adam Palmer was about two years old when the family came to Harrison County, where he was reared on the pioneer farm and attended the primitive schools of the period.  In his youth he learned the carpenter's trade, which he followed in connection with farm enterprise in Archer Township until 1860, when he removed to a farm in North Township, this place having been improved and developed by him and having continued his place of residence until his death, October 15, 1881.  His widow survived him by fifteen years and passed to the life eternal on the 29th of Feb. 1896, both  having been earnest members of the Methodist Episcopal Church.  The names and respective dates of birth of their children are here recorded:  Jacob G., Oct. 18, 1838; Mary E., Jul. 8, 1840; William, May 21, 1842; Israel A., Jun. 2, 1844; Thomas A., subject of this review, Oct. 28, 1849.
     Thomas A. Palmer gained his youthful education in the rural schools of Harrison County and as a youth he learned the carpenter's trade, principally under the direction of his father.  After devoting a few years to work at his trade he engaged in farming, with which great basic industry he has continued his connection during the long intervening years, the wile he has owned and resided upon his present farm since the time of his marriage, in 1875.  He has always been ready to give his support to measures and enterprises advanced for the general good of the community, is a democrat in politics, and is an active member of the Methodist Episcopal Church at Hanover, as was  also his wife, whose death, on the 3d of March, 1911, brought the supreme loss and bereavement of his life.
     April 29, 1875, marked the marriage of Mr. Palmer to Miss Jennie E. Fowler, who was born and reared in Stock Township, and who was a daughter of James W. and Elizabeth (Crawford) Fowler, who passed the closing years of their lives on their farm in Stock Township, near Scio.  Mr. Fowler was born in Monroe Township, this county, Oct. 12, 1929, and was a son of Benjamin and Jane (Whittaker) Fowler, whose marriage was solemnized in this county.  Benjamin Fowler was born in Pennsylvania Oct. 31, 1802, and was a boy at the time of the removal of the family to Harrison County, Ohio, where his father, John Fowler became a pioneer farmer and where he himself passed the remainder of his life, in Monroe Township.  James W. Fowler married Miss Elizabeth Crawford on the 7th of June, 1852, and in 1861 they settled on the farm in Stock Township which continued to be their place of residence during the remainder of their lives, both having been earnest members of the Methodist Episcopal Church.
     Mr. and Mrs. Palmer became the parents of two children:  Nellie I. is the wife of Loyd M. Nixon, of North Township, and they have one son, Clyde; Mary E. is the wife of Rev. Robert M. Albaugh,  a clergyman of the Baptist Church, and they reside in Portsmouth, Ohio, their two children being Roberta M. and William Carroll.

WILLIAM T. PALMER is effectively showing his executive mettle and practical resourcefulness in his independent operations as a farmer in his native township, and is a son of Andrew Palmer, who likewise is a prosperous exponent of farm enterprise in Nottingham Township, Harrison County, and who is made the subject of a personal sketch on the other pages of the volume, so that a repetition of the family record is not demanded in the present article. 
     William T. Palmer was born in Nottingham Township on the 28th of Nov. 1874, and his boyhood and youth found him not neglectful of the advantages offered in the district schools of his native township, where he was reared on his father's farm.  As a young man he found employment as a farm workman, and he continued his effective service in this capacity until in 1901 he engaged in independent farm enterprise in North Township.  After having there rented a farm and given his attention to its management for one year he rented a  farm in Stock Township, where he centered his vigorous farm enterprise for the ensuing five years.  Success attended his determined and well directed efforts, and in February, 1907, he found himself so effectively reinforced as to enable him to purchase his present farm, which comprises seventy-two acres of the fertile and valuable land of Nottingham Township.  Here he has gained the real status of independence as a representative of the basic industries of agriculture and stock-growing, and his success has been a fitting reward for his earnest and faithful endeavors.  Mr. Palmer gives his political support to the republican party, and he served one term as trustee of Nottingham Township.  His wife is an active member of the Christian Church.
     On the 20th of March, 1900, Mr. Palmer wedded Miss Celeste Merryman, who was born and reared in Nottingham Township, and who is a daughter of Jeremiah C. Merryman.  Mr.and Mrs. Palmer have two children - Wilbur Carson and Frances Gayle.

ALBERT  C. POULSON.  The personal characteristics and broad experience of Mr. Poulson have enabled him to achieve distinctive success in connection with farm enterprise in his native county and township, and he is now one of the venerable and influential citizens of the attractive rural community which has represented his home form the time of his birth to the present, his farm being a well improved tract of eighty acres in Nottingham Township.  In this township Mr. Paulson was born on the 8th of April, 1847, and he is a scion of one of the county's sterling pioneer families.  His paternal grandparents John and Susanna (Knight) Poulson, were natives of Maryland, where the former was born April 9, 1763, and the latter on the 16th of November, 1781, they having become early settlers in Nottingham Township, Harrison County, where Mr. Pouson reclaimed a farm from the forest and where he and his wife passed the remainder of their lives.  Names and dates of birth of their children are here recorded: Nelson, July 1, 1802; Matilda, December 5, 1805; Rachel April 17, 1809; and Andrew, December 28, 1814.  Andrew Poulson was born in Maryland and was young at the time of the family immigration to Ohio, where he was reared to manhood on the pioneer farm in Nottingham Township, in which township, in which township he continued his activities as a farmer during virtually his entire independent career.  He was an upright man, loyal in all of the relations of citizenship, and was of venerable age at the time of his death, as was also his wife, both having been earnest members of the Methodist Episcopal Church.  As a young man Andrew Poulson wedded Miss Susannah Garner who likewise was native of the State of Maryland, and who was a daughter of Hezekiah and Sophia (Trippett) Garner, her parents having come from Maryland to Harrison County in the pioneer days and having passed the remainder of their lives in Nottingham Township.  They became the parents of eleven children, namely: John, James, Julia, Mary, Elizabeth, Susannah, Amanda, Sarah, Edward, Thomas and Nelson, the last named having died when a young man.  Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Poulson became the parents of five children: John, who died when about seventy-four years of age; William, who died in August, 1920; Albert C., the immediate subject of this sketch; Amanda, the wife of Jasper Irons, of Moorefield Township, Harrison County; and Hezekiah resides in Nottingham Township, more specific mention of him being offered in later paragraphs.
     The Hines District School in Nottingham Township gave to Albert C. Poulson his early educational advantages, from his youth to the present time he has maintained close association with agricultural and live-stock industry in his native township.  His political alignment is in the ranks of the republican party, and his wife and daughter hold membership in the Methodist Episcopal Church at Deersville.
     On the 4th of June, 1891, was solemnized the marriage of Mr. Poulson to Miss Bertha Granville, daughter of John and Martha (Wheeler) Granville.  John Granville, who was born in Franklin Township, Harrison County, became a skilled stonemason, followed his trade for a number of years at Scio, this county, and then removed to the village of Tappan, likewise in Harrison County, where he and his wife remained until their death, both having been members of the Methodist Episcopal Church.  They became the parents of nine children: Clara (deceased), Mary, Anna, Jennie, Nettie, Bertha, Wilbur (deceased), Blanche and Perley.  Mr. and Mrs. Poulson have two children, both of whom remain at the parental home.  Martha Blanche is the wife of Joseph Griffith, who is associated in the work and management of her father's farm, and they have one son, Joseph Cole.  Harold, son of the subject of thsi sketch, as already noted, is a member of the parental home circle.

GEORGE L. POULSON exemplifies a full measure of sponsorship for constructive enterprise in connection with agricultural and dairy enterprise in North township, Harrison County, where he is the owner of an excellent farm of 170 acres.  He was born in Wayne township, Belmont County, Ohio, on the 28th of August, 1871, and is a son of John W. and Mary M. (Davis) Poulson, the former of whom likewise was born in Belmont County, and the latter was born in Bedford County, Pennsylvania, a daughter of George Davis, who was a prosperous farmer in that county.  John W. Poulson was reared and educated in Belmont County and is a representative of an honored pioneer family of that section of the Buckeye State.  In that county were born his parents, Mortimer and Olivia (McFadden) Poulson, who there passed their entire lives, the father having devoted his active career to farm industry and he and his wife having been earnest members of the Methodist Episcopal Church.  they became the parents of five children - George W., Franklin, John William, Margaret and Hannah.
     John William Poulson
was reared and educated in his native county, as previously stated, and there he became not only a successful farmer in Wayne Township but also gave effective service as a local preacher of the Methodist Episcopal Church.  About the year 1914 he and his wife removed to the State of Arkansas, where he is now engaged in farming near Wheeling, besides continuing his earnest church service, and both he and his wife being specially zealous in the activities of the Methodist Episcopal Church.  They became the parents of nine children: Josephine is the wife of William F. Clark and they reside in the State of Missouri; George L., of this review, was the next in order of birth; Charles R. is a clergyman of the Methodist Church and at the time of this writing holds a pastoral charge at West Salem, Wayne County, Ohio; Emma M. is the widow of Dr. M. J. Skiff and lives at Northeast, Ohio; Omar B. is a pastor of the Methodist Church at Altoona, Pennsylvania; William Arthur resides at Canton, Ohio; Jennie is the wife of Thomas Carpenter, of Bellville, Richland County, Ohio;  Herman remains at the parental home; and Mary died in early childhood.
     George L. Poulson gained his early education in the district schools of his native county and supplemented this by attending the high school at Somerton, that county.  He remained at the parental home in Belmont County until his marriage in 1895, and for two years thereafter he found employment on the fine dairy farm of Dorsey Brothers in Washington County, Pennsylvania.  For a time thereafter he was associated with the operation of a saw mill at Loydsville in Belmont County, Ohio, and in 1901 he rented a farm near Scio, Harrison County, where he conducted a successful diary business during the ensuing five years in partnership with his brother-in-law, Thomas S. Wood, of whom individual mention is made on other pages, their alliance in this field of enterprise having continu8ed thirteen years.  In 1906 Mr. Poulson purchased and established his home upon his present form, which he has brought to a high standard of productiveness and on which he continues his successful dairy business, with the Village o Scio as the principal market for his products.  Mr. Poulson is a republican in his political proclivities and he and his wife hold membership in the Methodist Episcopal Church at Hanover, Ohio.

HEZEKIAH G. POULSON, younger brother of Albert C. Poulson, subject of the preceding personal sketch, likewise was born of the old homestead farm in Nottingham Township and is numbered among the prosperous farmers of this township, the date of his nativity having been March 7, 1851, and his youthful education having been obtained in the district schools.  As a young man he assumed independent functions in connection with the activities of the old home farm, in the management of which he continued until 1901, when he removed to another farm not far distant.  There he continued his operations until 1912, when he removed to his present farm, which adjoins his father's old home place and which comprises 101 acres.
     The year 1900 recorded the marriage of Mr. Pouson to Miss Anna B. Clark, daughter of Daniel and Mary (Locke), and the one child of the union is a daughter, Vivian L., who was born Sept. 25, 1904.
(See Albert C. Poulson for more details)
 
 
 
 
 

.

  .
 
CLICK HERE to Return to
HARRISON COUNTY, OHIO
CLICK HERE to Return to
OHIO GENEALOGY EXPRESS
This Webpage has been created by Sharon Wick exclusively for
Ohio Genealogy Express  ©2008
Submitters retain all copyrights