
Francis M.
BARNWELL, merchant of Ozark, was born in Simpson Township, Johnson
County, Ill, October 23, 1855, to John C. Barnwell, a native of North
Carolina who
was taken by his parents to Middle Tennessee when a small boy. His
father was William Barnwell, a farmer by occupation and probably a
North Carolinian by birth. John C.
Barnwell is one of eight children, five sons and three daughters, and
of these eight he was the second son and child in order of birth. His
parents removed from Tennessee in 1840
or 1842, when he was about thirteen years old, by means of their own
team and an emigrant wagon, to southern Illinois, and took up some land
in Simpson Township, upon which
they erected a good log house, which is still standing. The grandfather
of Francis M., who was one of the first settlers in this region, was a
man of ability and integrity, whose word
was generally taken as authority. He was for many years a Justice of
the Peace and an Associate Judge. John C. Barnwell has been a lifelong
farmer, and served three years
in the War of the Rebellion. He enlisted in 1862 in the One Hundred and
Twentieth Illinois Infantry as a private soldier and was promoted to be
Orderly-Sergeant, at the close of the
war returning home safe and sound from the exposures of army life. His
wife was Nancy Jane Roberts, of Kentucky, whose father died when she
was a child. They settled on a farm
near his parents, on Government land. He now has a farm of two hundred
acres, and is known as one of the leading fruit-growers of this
section, having large and thrifty orchards of
apples, peaches, pears, plums, cherries, and all kinds of small fruits.
He spares no pains nor expense in securing and raising the best that is
to be had. Mr. and Mrs. Barnwell have buried
one son, James Logan, who was two years old at the time of bis death.
They have living eight sons and three daughters, viz: William H.,
Josinh W., Francis M., John W.; Eliza A., wife
of J. M. Gray; George W.; Mary R.,the wife of W.S. Rainbolt; Thomas C;
Charles G.; Nancy Jane, wife of C. M. Rushing; and Adolphus. These
children are all living in Johnson
County except George, who lives in Kentucky.
Francis M. was brought up on the farm and was well educated in his
youth. He was married in 1878 to Mary Ann Maxwell, of Saline County,
Ill., the daughter of Dr. Golden, of that
county, a noted oculist, and the widow of George W. Maxwell. She died
in 1882, and Mr. Barnwell was married in 1888 to Alice Miller, daughter
of Ezekiel M. Miller, of Tunnel Hill,
who bad been a school teacher some years before her marriage. This
union has been blessed with one son, Roy, who is now one and a-half
years old. Mr. Barnwell opened a store
in New Burnside and removod to Ozark in 1889, where he is now carrying
on a general merchandise business and doing the principal trade of the
town. Mr. Barnwell was an undergraduate
of the Normal School at Carrol, completing the teachers' course in
1882. He is an Odd Fellow and a true Republican and is now a Notary
Public. He also does a general business
outside, dealing in railroad ties and lumber, and his business as a
general merchant amounts to about $12,000 per year. Mr. and Mrs.
Barnwell are members of the Methodist Episcopal
and Cumberland Presbyterian Churches respectively.
transcribed by Nan Starjak
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