
Francis
F. BEAMES, residing in township 11, range 5, Johnson County, was born
in Whitley County, Ky., February 1, 1835. His father was William
Beames, born in the same county, and was a farmer by occupation, as was
also his father before him, James Beames, who was probably born in
Scotland, and was certainly of Scotch parents. Grandfather Beames was
married in Scotland, and he and his wife were among the pioneer
settlers of Whitley County, Ky., where they were prosperous people, and
well known. They reared a family of eight children, three sons and five
daughters, and both died in that county, Mr. Beames at the great age of
one hundred and two years, Mrs. Beames a little later, at the age of
eighty-five years. William Beames was the third child of this family,
and married Miss Martha, a daughter of Frank and Nancy Faulkner, of
Tennessee. The parents of our subject came from Kentucky to southern
Illinois in the fall of 1852 in regular emigrant style, with their team
and wagons. They had three covered wagons and a two-horse buggy. They
brought with them their entire family of nine children, five sons and
four daughters, of whom our subject is the fourth son and seventh child
in order of birth. They first settled in Pope County, where they bought
eighty acres of land. Mr. Beames died soon afterward at the age of
fifty-three .years, near Glendale, Pope County. His widow lived on the
eighty-acre farm until her death, in February, 1888, at the age of
eighty-two years. Of this large family but three survive, our subject
and two of the daughters, who are Melinda, widow of Thomas Williams, a
farmer of Johnson County, and Hannah, widow of Joseph Fox, who is
residing on her farm in Union Township.
Francis F. Beames was educated in the subscription schools of Kentucky,
in a rude log cabin of the times. He attended school a few months each
year until he was fourteen, and on attaining his eighteenth year left
home and worked at various occupations for some years. He then went to
California across the plains, and was a stock-herder there for about
three years, at $70 per month. He remained in California about four
years, and then returned to Pope County, Ill., where he has been
successfully engaged in farming ever since. He was married to Mary M.
Dent, of Jackson County, Ala., a daughter of James and Fanny (Lisles)
Dent, who came from Alabama to southern Illinois about 1854. Mr. Dent
was a volunteer in 1861 in Company II, Thirty-first Illinois Infantry,
serving as a private, and was killed May 22, 1862, before Vicksburg.
His wife died January 15,1863, leaving three daughters: Mary, wife of
Mr. Beames; Elizabeth, wife of Morgan Bryant, a farmer of Hardin
County; and Lucinda, wife of Mack Ledbetter, a farmer of Pope County.
Mr. and Mrs. Beames, soon after their marriage, bought eighty acres of
timber land for $600, with a small log cabin on it, into which they
moved and lived for a year or two. Our subject now owns one hundred and
ten acres of land, eighty-five of which are under a high state of
cultivation, and are devoted to general farming. He and his wife have
lost one infant son and one daughter, and have three sons and three
daughters living, namely: Joseph, a farmer of Hardin County;
William, unmarried and at home; Telford, a young man; Cordelia; Arty, a
miss of twelve years; and Lillie, aged eight, all at home. Socially Mr.
Beames is an Odd Fellow and a Democrat, and he and his wife are members
of the General Baptist Churcii. The latter belongs to Rebecca Lodge,
holding membership with Stonefort Lodge No. 731.
transcribed by Nan Starjak
Source:
The Biographical Review of Johnson, Massac, Pope and Hardin
Counties
Chicago
Biographical Publishing Co., 1893
pp. 388-389
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