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Isaac Harris
Biography |
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Portrait and Biographical Album of Fulton County,
Illinois: containing full page portraits and biographical sketches of
prominent and representative citizens of the county: together with
portraits and biographies of all the presidents of the United States,
and governors of the state; Biographical Pub. Co., Chicago, IL; 1890;
page 255-256; Transcribed by Margaret Rose Whitehurst
Isaac Harris. The name of Harris is known and respected
throughout Fulton County as belonging to one of the earliest pioneers
of this section of the country, in whose honor the township of Harris
was named. The present representative of the family is a son of
the old pioneer, and was himself a pioneer. For many years he has
been an important factor in the agricultural life of the township of
Bernadotte and is one of its most venerated and highly esteemed
citizens.
Our subject was born in Licking County, Ohio, February 21,
1813. His parents were of Pennsylvania birth. They came to
Fulton County in 1827, and in 1834 removed to what is now Harris
Township, which was named in honor of John Harris, the father. He
was a prominent settler here for many years, dying at the venerable age
of ninety-five years. His wife was eighty-six years old at the
time of her death. In the history of Fulton County, we find the
following concerning Mr. Harris’ settlement here: “Harris
Township, which borders upon the western boundary of the county was
named in honor of John Harris, its first settler. He removed here
from Bernadotte Township, and located on section 18, as early as
1827.” It is said that for several years he followed the
occupation of hunting, finding abundance of game in the native forests
and upon the broad, beautiful, uncultivated prairies. It is said
that when he first visited this region he made the journey to and from
Ohio on foot.
The subject of this sketch remained with his parents until he
was within twenty-two days of being twenty-one years old. At that
youthful age he married and established a home of his own, taking as
his bride Margaret, daughter, of John and Rachael Sinnett, to whom he
was married January 30, 1834. Their union resulted in the birth
of five children, four daughters and one son, of whom the following is
recorded: Emily born November 17, 1834, married J. L. Clifford,
and died February 14, 1880; Mary, born August 11, 1836, married William
DeFord in October, 1855,; he is a butcher by trade, and they live in
Smithfield, Cass Township; William H. was born on the 13th of February,
1839, enlisted in 1862 in Company H, One Hundred and Third Illinois
Infantry, and was killed at the battle of Lookout Mountain in 1863;
Rhoda, born February 2, 1841, married Edward Fennel in July, 1858, and
they live on their own farm of two hundred acres in Wayne County, Iowa;
Margaret, born March 11, 1843, married John Wheeler, October 30, 1864,
and they live on a leased farm of three hundred and twenty acres in
Putman Township.
Mr. Harris was married to his present estimable wife June 22,
1843. She was formerly Margaret J. Littlejohn, and is a daughter
of Abraham and Sarah Littlejohn. The union of our subject and his
wife has been blessed to them by the birth of ten children, of whom the
following is recorded: Perry, born August 10, 1844, is married
and lives on a homestead in the State of Nebraska; Sarah, born April
17, 1846, married Samuel Chambers and they live on a farm in Bernadotte
Township; Nancy, born February 20, 1847, married John Crusen, who is a
butcher, and they live in Cuba, Putman Township; John L. born February
8, 1850, lives on his farm of one hundred and sixty acres in the State
of Nebraska; Lana, born January 8, 1855, married Jesse Nate, a
dairyman, and they live in Lewistown; Emma Jane, born September 7,
1858, married George Stockham, and they live on their farm of one
hundred and ten acres in Lewistown Township; Julia E., born December
16, 1860, married William Freeman, whose biography will be found
elsewhere in this book; Elmira M., born February 28, 1865, married
William Johnson,, and lives on part of her father’s farm; Amanda E.,
born January 19, 1857, died at the age of nine months.
Soon after our subject’s first marriage he entered one hundred
and twenty-eight acres of land in Harris Township. After living
on it two years he bought one hundred and sixty acres on section 13,
Bernadotte Township, where he has resided ever since. It is in
every respect a good farm, supplied with ample buildings, under the
best of cultivation and highly productive. Our subject has been a
hard workingman. In his younger days he used to walk from
Lewistown to where he now lives, cut two cords of wood and walk back
again the same day, which feat no one but a very strong, active man
could have performed. He has worked for fifty cents a day in the
harvest-field.
Mr. Harris has been a witness of the many changes that have made
this a well-developed country and which have been brought about in a
great measure by the introduction of modern machinery that has so
greatly facilitated the work of harvesting. He is a man of strong
constitution and comes of a hardy, long-lived race, having about one
hundred relatives now living. He has five widowed sisters and
three brothers, the youngest of whom is sixty years old, and among his
descendants he can count seventy-five grand children and
great-grandchildren. His mother-in-law, Mrs. Littlejohn, is
living with him and has attained the remarkable old age of ninety-two
years. Mr. Harris is a consistent member of the Methodist
Episcopal Church, and in politics is a sturdy Republican. His
portrait is presented on another page of this volume.
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