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Van Wert County,
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BIOGRAPHIES
Found in:
A Portrait and biographical record of Allen and Van Wert Counties, Ohio : containing biographical sketches of many prominent and representative citizens : together with biographies and portraits of all the presidents of the United States, and biographies of the governors of Ohio.

Chicago: A.W. Bowen & Co., 1896, 1458 pgs.

A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - IJ - K - L - M - N - OPQ - R - S - T - UV - W - XYZ

* LADD, LEONARD E., DR.
* LAMERSON, JOHN C.
* LAMPE, JOHN C.
* LARE, JOHN D.
* LARUE, HARLAN F.
* LAWHEAD, GEORGE
* LAWRENCE, WILBUR C.
* LEATHERS, HARRISON
* LEESON, JOHN
* LEHMANN, HENRY G.
* LEITNER, W. T.
* LEPLEY, JACOB
* LESLEY, GEORGE
* LESLIE, ELI P.
  * LEWIS, ALEXANDER
* LEWIS, EUPHEMIA
* LEWIS, GEORGE
* LONG, MICHAEL
* LONG, SAMUEL W.
* LONGSWORTH, CHARLES R.
* LONGSWORTH, WILLIAM N.
* LONGWELL, ALFRED L.
* LORBER, LOUIS W.
* LYBARGER, WILLIAM L.
* LYBOLD, ANDREW
* LUDWIG, WILLIAM W.
* LUERSMANN, JOHN

HARLAN F. LARUE, one of the most successful educators of Harrison Township, Van Wert county, is a son of Joseph LaRue Harlan was born Sept. 15, 1861, on his father's farm in Harrison townships.  He was educated in the district school and at Worthington (Ohio) Central normal, and for two years, also, was an attendant at Denison university, at Granville.  In 1880 he began the work pertaining to the profession in which he became so prominently identified as the seasons passed by.  The Center school district, No. 5, Harrison township, was the second scene, for four months, of his initiatory triumph, followed next by two terms in his home district; and then the school in district No. 8, Pleasant township, was under his charge one year; next, in the same township, No. 6 was taught under him for a year; then he returned to district No. 6, and devoted another year to that school, following which he taught two years in his home district; for the period of two years following he taught in the Central high school of Harrison township, and then took a necessary rest for a year; the following two years he had charge of district No. 2, thus making the longest record of any other instructor in Harrison township.  Mr. LaRue has been an active member of the Van Wert Teacher's institute.  He is not a believer in corporal punishment, but has never failed to maintain an effective discipline by other and milder methods.
     The marriage of Mr. LaRue was celebrated Mar. 31, 1887, with Miss Mary Louisa Bauserman, who was born Sept. 25, 1863, a daughter of Jacob and Jane (Harvey) Bauserman, who were of Irish descent and the parents of four children: Ruth, Eliza, Mary L., and AllieMr. Bauserman was a farmer of considerable consequence, owned 120 acres of land, which he pre-empted and died in July, 1865, a member of the Presbyterian church.  After his marriage, Harlan F. LaRue passed two years in Pleasant township, and then settled in Harrison township, where he now has a most pleasant home on a farm of forty acres (belonging to his wife, being purchased with money she inherited), which he has partly cleared from the woods.  The children born to Mr. and Mrs. LaRue were named according to birth, as follows:  Ethel Leora, Feb. 7, 1888; Vere Princess, Nov. 6, 1890; Zora G., May 14, 1892, and Frank Irving, Nov. 15, 1894.  In their religious affiliations Mr. and Mrs. LaRue are Baptists.  Politically Mr. LaRue is a republican.  For one year he was a lecturer for the Patrons of Husbandry.
     JOSEPH LARUE, father of Harlan F. LaRue, a substantial farmer of Harrison township, Van Wert County, Ohio, is a son of Lambert and Jane (McBride) LaRue.  His paternal grandfather came from France, settled in Virginia, and was a soldier in the war of the Revolution.  Alexander McBride, the maternal grandfather of Joseph RaRue, was of Scotch-Irish descent and was also a patriot of the Revolutionary war.  Lambert La Rue, grandfather of our subject, was born in Washington county, Va., was reared on a farm, was a soldier in the war of 1812, was married in his native state, and thence came to Ohio, where he located, first on Long Island, some forty miles below Wheeling, then moved to Richland county, where he cleared up a good farm, and finally came to Van Wert county, in 1854, and settled on a farm of eighty acres in Pleasant township, and here died in November of the same year, at the age of about sixty-two years.  To Lambert LaRue and wife were born ten children, as follows:  Alexander, Jane, John, Abraham, Elizabeth, Margaret, Martha, Mary, Joseph, and another.  Mr. LaRue was for many years an elder in the Presbyterian church, of which his wife was also a devout member; in politics he was a whig.
     Joseph LaRue was born in Richland county, Ohio, July 24, 1836, received the ordinary education and was reared to farming and also to the carpenter's trade.  He came to Van Wert county with his parents, and April 30, 1857, married Miss Matilda Eller, who was born June 16, 1839, in Richland county, a daughter of Jacob and Sarah (Hilburn) Eller, who were of German and Irish descent respectively, and the parents of nine children, viz: Polly, John, Frederick, Betsey, Sarah, Jeremiah, Matilda, Miriam and Rachel.  Jacob Eller, was a son of Abraham Eller and came from Richland county to Van Wert county in 1849, cleared up eighty acres of land in Pleasant township, and here died.  Two years after marriage Joseph LaRue came to Harrison township, in the spring of 1860, settled on a forty-acre farm, on which he lived about twelve years, and later increased it to eighty acres.
     May 2, 1864, Mr. LaRue enlisted, at Van Wert, in the 100-day service and served until honorably discharged, at Camp Chase, Ohio Aug. 28, 1864.  He then veteranized, Sept. 1, 1864, in company B, Seventy-eighth Ohio infantry, and in June, 1865, was mustered out, on account of the close of the war, at Columbus, Ohio.  He saw service at Point Lookout, Md., was with Sherman on his celebrated march to the sea, and at Milton, Ga., was injured by an iron rail falling on him while tearing down a railroad water-tank; but he continued on the march, although he could not always carry his knapsack, and eventually reached Washington, D. C., with the victorious troops and witnessed the grand review of May 23-24, 1865.
     To the marriage of Mr. and Mrs. LaRue have been born seven children, in the following order:  Sarah J., Harlan F., Col. Ellsworth, Orland Sherman, Almon V., Iona D. and Viola M.  Mr. and Mrs. LaRue are members of the Baptist church, and in politics is a republican.  He is also a member of the G. A. R., Capper post, No. 231, at Convoy, and likewise a member of the grange.  His social standing, it is needless to add, is among the most respectable families of Harrison township.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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