Asahel BURNETT, of
Bloomfield Township, Johnson County, was born in Vernon Township,
Trumbull County, Ohio, December 4, 1829. His father,
John Burnett, was born in New Jersey, and his grandfather, William
Burnett, was also born in the same State. There John was reared and
married, and in
1802 emigrated from New Jersey to Ohio, where he was one of the first
settlers in Trumbull County, there being but six families in the county
before him.
He secured a tract of land in Hubbard Township, upon which there was a
water power, which he improved. He then built a sawmill, put in a
turning lathe,
and besides this machinery operated his
farm, residing upon it until his death. He was twice married, and
reared nineteen children.
John Burnett was two
years old when his father moved to Ohio, where he was reared and
married. After his marriage he settled in Vernon Township,
bought a tract of timber land, cleared a farm in the wilderness and
lived there until 1845, when he sold out and moved to Portage County,
and bought a
farm in Charlestown Township three miles east of Ravenna. This farm he
occupied for a number of years, when he sold it and bought another
farm, this
time in Ravenna Township, within two miles of Ravenna, and there
resided until his death.
The name of the mother
of our subject before she was married was Harriet Merry, and she was
born in Hartford Township, Trumbull County, Ohio, in
July, 1801, being the first white child born in that townihip. Her
father, Charles Merry, was born in Massachusetts and emigrated to Ohio
about 1800,
being one of the first settlers in the Territory of Ohio, where he
secured a tract of timber land in Hartford Township and resided thereon
till his death. The
village of Burgh Hill is located on his farm. He was an officer in the
War of 1812, and lived to be ninety years of age, having been the
father of six children.
John Burnett and his wife were the parents of eight children: Julin,
Charles M., Asahel, Martha, Frank, Mary, William and Wellington. Asahel
received his
early education at his village school, and later he attended school in
Portage County. At the age of sixteen he returned to Trumbull County
and followed
the vocation of teaching for two terms in Trumbull County, at which
time there was but little public money used for school purposes, and
the schools were
in part subscription schools, each family paying according to the
number of scholars sent. He received $18 per month and boarded round
among his pupil's parents. After teaching two terms in Trumbull County
he taught three terras in Portage County, and later in Fleming County,
Ky., for two years. In 1853,
he removed to Illinois and bought the farm where he now resides, which
comprises twelve acres of timber, which he cleared and in part planted
to corn.
There were twenty fruit trees and a garden, which constituted the
improvements on the place. He worked the farm seven years and then
erected the frame house in which he now resides. He has one hundred and
seventy-five acres in the home farm and in addition owns another of
seventy-five acres, in Vienna Township. He was married in 1852 to Miss
Ellen Farnham and in 1854 to Didamia Robertson, who was born in Bowling
Green, Ky. Her parents were
William and Elizabeth Robertson, who were natives of Virginia and
Kentucky respectively.
Mr. and Mrs. Burnett
have one son, Marcus L. who was born in October, 1855, and married
Sarah Conley, who bore him two children, A. Breeze and
Chloe B. Our subject voted for Lincoln in 1864, but since then until
recently he has acted with the Democrats and now is a Prohibitionist.
It should have
been stated in its proper place that Mr. Burnett taught school in the
winter seasons for nearly twenty-six years, which is an indication of
his popularity as a teacher. Mr. Burnett and son belong to the Masonic
Lodge No. 150, at Vienna, and the former has always taken a decided
interest in educational matters
and has always been very actively engaged in promoting the welfare of
the community. He has served as School Director for a number of years.