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Biographies
Source:
Past and Present
of Knox County, Ohio
Albert B. Williams, Editor-in-Chief
Illustrated
Vol. II
Publ. by B. F. Bowen & Company, Indianapolis, Indiana
1912
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REV. OTTO P. TROGUS
Source: Past and Present of Knox
County, Ohio - Vol. II - Publ. by B. F. Bowen & Company,
Indianapolis, Indiana - 1912
- Page 502 |
|
BENJAMIN F. TULLOSS.
Mr. Tulloss was born on Nov. 13, 1865, in
Franklin county, Kansas, though little of his life was
spent in the Sunflower state of the West. He is
the son of William and Felicia S. (Scott) Tulloss,
both natives of Knox county, Ohio. John Tulloss,
the paternal grandfather, came from Virginia with the
early pioneers and settled in this county, and James
Scott, maternal grandfather, the first pastor of the
Presbyterian church at Mt. Vernon, was also a pioneer
here and he became a very influential and prominent man.
The father of the subject devoted his life to farming in
this county, moving from here to Kansas in the early
sixties, locating in Franklin county where he engaged
extensively in farming and stock raising. He was
elected probate judge, the duties of which position he
discharged with much ability for a number of years.
His death occurred in Kansas in 1866, after which the
family returned to Knox county, Ohio, and for a time
lived in Mt. Vernon, later moving to a farm three miles
west of that city. The mother is still living.
Benjamin F. Tulloss spent most of his boyhood in
Mt. Vernon, attend ing the public schools there until he
was eighteen years of age. Later he entered
Oberlin College at Oberlin, Ohio. After leaving
school he at once turned his attention to farming in
which he has been engaged to the present time, devoting
special attention to raising thoroughbred Holstein
cattle. He has a fine herd which are greatly
admired by all who see them and he raises for breeding
purposes. He has been very successful and no small
part of his annual income is derived from his stock,
which find a very ready market, owing to their superior
quality.
Mr. Tulloss was married on Dec. 27, 1888,
to Emma Myers, daughter of Joseph and
Clementine (Rinehart) Myers, a prominent Knox county
family, Mr. Myers having been a county
commissioner at one time.
Nine children have been born to Mr. and Mrs. Tulloss,
named as follows, and all living: Joseph W. is a
student at the Ohio State University; John J. is
at home; Charles R., Anna F., Felicia
C., Mary M., Elizabeth, Caroline,
Harriet A. These children are being given
every opportunity to obtain excellent educations.
Politically, Mr. Tulloss is a Democrat and is
active in public matters. He has served as a
member of the Democratic county central committee, and
he is a frequent delegate to county, district and state
conventions. He was real estate appraiser in
Clinton township in 1910. He was a member of the
local school hoard for fifteen years. He has
filled all public trusts reposed in him with much
ability and fidelity and to the satisfaction of the
public in general. Fraternally, he belongs to Mt.
Vernon Lodge, Knights of Pythias, and Clinton Grange,
Patrons of Husbandry, and he has been active in Grange
matters. He and his family are members of the
Congregational church and active in church and Sunday
school work. He has lived on the home place since
his marriage and he has a substantial, commodious home
in the midst of attractive surroundings.
Personally, Mr. Tulloss is a man of pleasing
presence, kind and obliging and a straightforward
business man.
Source: Past and Present of Knox
County, Ohio - Vol. II - Publ. by B. F. Bowen & Company,
Indianapolis, Indiana - 1912
- Page 847 |
|
CHARLES R. TULLOSS.
The struggles of the worthy pioneer will remain untold
unless some one interests himself in preserving it; this
last should be the mission of we of the aftermath.
We do not hear the howl of the wolf save in remote
places; we will not have an opportunity to again see the
“prairie schooner’’ its mission has been well and nobly
filled. The many great changes have taken place
slowly, and we realize their importance at this time.
Do we fully appreciate the Titanic struggle of the
pioneer, realizing the many privations he endured that
we of today might be blessed? The mission of
biography should be to bring to the living the voices of
the silent ones who would be remembered. We seek
no bombast for the living, but we do speak in a forceful
manner for those who made it possible for us to enjoy
these many present blessings. Charles Richard
Tulloss, one of the farmers of Morgan township,
Knox county, is a descendant of our sterling pioneers
and he has endeavored to uphold the honor of the family
name, which has been a familiar sound in this section of
the Buckeye state for more than a century, his
progenitor having braved the wilderness here when it was
still the domain of the painted savage and the wild
creatures of claw, fin and feather, and here inaugurated
the development of the locality which his descendants
have carried forward.
Mr. Tulloss was born on Sept. 9, 1853, on the
old Tulloss homestead where he has always
lived. He is the son of
WILLIAM and Cynthia (Smith)
TULLOSS.
Grandfather John J. Tulloss, born Sept. 6, 1783,
came from Fauquier county, Virginia, in 1807 and settled
in Licking county, Ohio, near Newark. He made the
first brick in the village, was school teacher and
farmer; was a captain in the war of 1812; returned to
Virginia and married Elizabeth Kaney; came back,
settled in Morgan township, Knox county, in 1815; died
in 1841; his wife died in 1869. He here became a
large land owner, possessing at one time six hundred and
forty acres of fine land, lying in the Licking and
Sycamore valleys, two miles northwest of where the city
of Utica now stands. He was prominent among the
pioneers of this section of the state and an influential
man of affairs, strong-minded, courageous and honorable.
His family consisted of eight children, namely: Ann,
wife of Benjamin Seymour, both deceased;
Elizabeth married Charles Uzziel Stephens,
both now deceased; William, father of the subject
of this sketch; Richard Shute, a sincere man and
influential citizen who is now deceased, is mentioned in
a later paragraph; John J. married
Caroline Smith and is now deceased; Benjamin,
who married Margaret Campbell, is a Baptist
minister of Mt. Vernon; Susan remained single;
Rodham married Elizabeth Harris.
WILLIAM TULLOSS,
mentioned above, devoted his life to farming and stock
raising and, like his father before him, became one of
the substantial and influential men of his community.
He was twice married. In 1856 he moved to Kansas,
where he became a leader in public affairs and he served
very creditably as probate judge of Franklin county,
that state, for a number of years. His death
occurred there in November, 1866, his wife having died
in 1863. They were the parents of five children,
namely: John S., deceased: James K. is
deceased; Levi is deceased; William S.
lives in Franklin county, Kansas; Charles
Richard, of this review.
William Tulloss, the father, was a
Republican and was always active in public matters.
He held various offices in his township. He was a
member of the Baptist church. His second wife was
Felicia Scott, daughter of Rev. James
Scott and wife, he being a prominent Presbyterian
minister for many years. To this union was born a
son, Benjamin F.
Charles R. Tulloss, of this sketch, went to Kansas
with his parents. He was educated in the district
schools of Morgan township, Knox county, Ohio, and in
Franklin county, Kansas. Upon the death of his
father he returned to Knox county and engaged in
farming, which he has continued to the present time.
He is a stock feeder. He is the owner of the old
Tulloss homestead which he has kept, his
part of the old farm consisting of three hundred acres.
He employs modern methods in his farming and stock
raising. He has an attractive and commodious
dwelling, and a library of choice and carefully selected
volumes and here he spends much of his spare time,
keeping in touch with the world’s best literature as
well as current topics of the day. He delights
especially in Darwin, Spencer, Mills,
Schopenhauer, Voltaire and similar works,
in fact, he has practically all the “evolution series,”
as well as those of Tolstoy, Henry George,
the great single-tax advocate. But his library
embraces all subjects. He is very interesting to
converse with, being thus self-educated, for, in the
language of Franklin, “Reading maketh a wise man.”
Mr. Tulloss is a man of individuality, fearless
in his opinions and a thinker. While he is
interested in public matters, he has never voted.
He is liberal in his religious views, and has never
joined any church, believing not in man-made creeds or
set forms of worship.
RICHARD SHEETS TULLOSS
was born June 13, 1819. He was reared on the farm
and after his father’s death took charge of the farm.
He was elected to the constitutional convention of Ohio
in 1873 and served on the committee of privileges and
election, on preamble and bill of rights and on
agriculture. He filled a number of township
offices. He was an influential citizen and highly
esteemed for his social quality and straightforward
business transactions. He remained single and died
Aug. 24, 1892. He was a son of John
James and Elizabeth Tulloss, who are
referred to in preceding paragraphs.
Source: Past and Present of Knox
County, Ohio - Vol. II - Publ. by B. F. Bowen & Company,
Indianapolis, Indiana - 1912
- Page 491 |
|
ERNEST C. TULLOSS.
A farmer can be dishonorable as well as any other
business man or he can be as honorable; he can
misrepresent his grain, his stock, his hay and his
apples, and can secure a buyer by such
misrepresentations, but when he is found out it is much
harder for him to live down the odium than it is for the
merchant or other business man to do the same. The
latter can much more easily sell out and go where he is
not known than the farmer, for it seems harder for the
farmer to make changes without injuring himself
financially. So the descendants of the farmer must
remain, or at least usually do so, and take the results
of their father's misdeeds, while on the other hand the
second and third generations are often helped to a
greater extent than they can realize by the prestige
established in their communities in former days by their
ancestors. One of the farmers of Morgan township,
Knox county, who can see nothing but good results
flowing from the life work of his parents is the subject
of this sketch. They were persons of the highest
respectability and of unusual intelligence, and their
influence was very strong for upright living and steady
industry while they lived.
Mr. Tulloss was born on Jan. 29, 1865, on the
farm where he has always lived, in the southern part of
Knox county, Ohio. He is the son of Rodham and
Elizabeth (Harris) Tulloss. He was reared on
the home farm and when of proper age he assisted with
the general work there, and in the winter time attended
the public schools of his district. On Jan. 2,
1894, he was united in marriage with Laura L. Martin,
daughter of Calvin and Isabelle (Runyan) Martin,
a highly respected family of Richland county, Ohio.
To the subject two sons and one daughter have been born,
namely: Raymond R., Dale M. and Laura
Isabelle.
Ernest C. Tulloss lived with his uncle, R. S.
Tulloss, from the age of ten to twenty-one. and
after his marriage he came to the home farm and here he
has resided ever since, owning one hundred and sixty
acres of as good land as the township affords, which he
has kept well improved and under a fine state of
cultivation, carrying on general farming and stock
raising of all kinds, handling only the best breeds, and
he has been extensively engaged in the daily business,
making a success of whatever he has turned his attention
to. He has built an attractive, large modern home,
equipped with furnace heat, gas light and running water.
Everything about his place denotes good management.
Politically, Mr. Tulloss is a Democrat, and
while he has long been active in public affairs he is
not especially active, though he has served his
community as justice of the peace for a period of nine
years in an able and satisfactory manner, and for a
number of years he has been a member of the local school
board, and has done much for the improvement of the
schools of the township. Fraternally, he is a
member of the Masonic order and the Knights of Pythias
at Utica, and he and his family belong to the Disciples
church, and he is an elder and trustee in the church and
is active in church and Sunday school work.
Source: Past and Present of Knox
County, Ohio - Vol. II - Publ. by B. F. Bowen & Company,
Indianapolis, Indiana - 1912
- Page 888 |
|
GEORGE W. TULLOSS.
This well-known citizen is an excellent representative
of the better class of farmers of the United States.
He comes from an ancestry that distinguished itself in
pioneer times. When the country was covered with
an almost interminable forest of large trees and the
woods filled with wild animals, his people came here and
began to carve from the primeval forests, build schools
and churches, and introduce the customs of civilization
in the wilderness. They were genuine pioneers,
willing to take the hardships that they might acquire
the soil and the homes that were sure to rise, and it
would seem that many of their commendable traits have
outcropped in the subject, for he has been a man who has
not permitted untoward circumstances to thwart his
purposes when once he determined upon a certain course.
George W. Tulloss was born on Mar. 21, 1856, on
a farm in Morgan township, this county. He is the
son of John J. and Caroline (Smith) Tulloss, both
natives of Morgan township, this county, and here they
grew to maturity amid pioneer conditions, received such
educational training as the old-time log school houses
afforded and here they were married and began life on
the farm, the father becoming one of the successful
tillers of the soil in his part of the county and known
as a man of excellent principles. They were the
parents of eight children, namely: Emily,
deceased; Byron L. lived in Columbus, Ohio;
John J., deceased; Reece P. was a resident of
Putnam county, Ohio, for many years, when he died after
raising a family, one of which, a son, Reece E.,
is pastor of the Evangelical Lutheran church at
Constantine, Michigan; Benjamin F., who was next
in order of birth, went to Texas in 1877 and has not
been heard from since 1881; George W., of this
review; Cynthia A. and Carrie C. are
single and living on the old homestead in Morgan
township, which place they own and operate. The
death of the father of these children occurred in April,
1902, his widow surviving until in March, 1905.
They were buried in Fairview cemetery, Miller township,
near the old home. The father was a life-long
Democrat and a public spirited citizen, but never an
office seeker, though he served as township trustee for
many years, also was a member of the local school board
for many years. He and his family were members of
the old-school Baptist church and he was a devout
churchman.
George W. Tulloss was reared on the home farm
and was educated in the common schools of the township
and the normal school at Utica, Ohio, which his brothers
and sisters also attended. He followed school
teaching for ten years in Morgan county, Miller
township.
Mr. Tulloss was married on Sept. 20, 1883, to
Rilla Boner, daughter of Matthew and
Hannah (Dallrymple) Boner, the father a prominent
citizen of Wayne township and influential in all public
matters a prosperous farmer. Mr. Boner's
death occurred in May, 1900, at the age of sixty-nine
years, but his widow survives. Mr. Boner
spent his entire life in this home. The union of
Mr. and Mrs. Tulloss has been without issue.
In September, 1883, Mr. Tulloss took
charge of the old Boner home, which has
been in possession of this family for many years and was
one of the first farms settled in Wayne township,
originally known as the Lewis farm, Mr.
Lewis having purchased one thousand acres from
the government. William Boner,
grandfather of Mrs. Tulloss, purchased a
part of the original tract from Mr. Lewis.
Eliphalet Lewis, son of the original purchaser of
the land, bought two hundred acres of the original tract
from his father; he came out from New Jersey and settled
on it. He reared a family of seven children and here he
spent the rest of his life. Then William Boner, who was
a widower, married the widow Lewis, and to this union
two children wer were born, Mathew,
the father of Mrs. Tulloss, was the son. and
Avarilla was the daughter, who became the wife of
Ambrose Dallrymple, of Morrow county.
There are one hundred and sixty-five acres of most
excellent land in the farm originally owned by Mr.
Boner. Mr. Tulloss has kept it well
improved and under a high state of cultivation. He
has an inviting modern home and large convenient
outbuildings. The residence stands upon an
elevation commanding a fine view of South Fork valley of
Owl creek, one of the most fertile valleys in the
county. Here he has successfully engaged in
general farming and stock raising and feeding. He
raises all the feed he can on his farm for his own
stock; however, about five years ago he rented his farm
and has since lived practically retired, merely
superintending his farm in a general way. He also
has other interests, having been very successful in a
business way.
Mr. Tulloss is a regularly ordained minister of
the old-school Baptist church, being pastor of the Wayne
Baptist church, which was- organized in 1810 and is
still an organized congregation. In later years
Mr. Tulloss has not been actively engaged in the
ministry, but he and his wife are still adherents of
that church and have done much good through their work
in the same. Fraternally, he belongs to Wayne
Grange No. 262, Patrons of Husbandry, and he has been
deputy state master of the state grange for Knox county,
having held this office for four years, during which
period he has organized many new granges, the county
having been well organized prior to his incumbency.
Politically, he is a Republican, and he has always kept
thoroughly in formed on public questions, and has been a
frequent attendant to party caucuses and active in
elections, but never an office seeker. He has
served as a member of the township board of elections
and has always been interested in educational matters.
He is a splendid gentleman personally and is popular
with the people, for they know he stands for progress
and wholesomeness in all relations of life.
Source: Past and Present of Knox
County, Ohio - Vol. II - Publ. by B. F. Bowen & Company,
Indianapolis, Indiana - 1912
- Page 837 |
|
RICHARD S.
TULLOSS - See Charles R.
Tulloss
Source: Past and Present of Knox
County, Ohio - Vol. II - Publ. by B. F. Bowen & Company,
Indianapolis, Indiana - 1912
- Page 493 |
|
WILLIAM
TULLOSS - See Charles R.
Tulloss
Source: Past and Present of Knox
County, Ohio - Vol. II - Publ. by B. F. Bowen & Company,
Indianapolis, Indiana - 1912
- Page 492 |
NOTES:
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