John F. Casper
John F.
CASPER, a farmer of fifty-four years' residence in Johnson
County, and who has lived nineteen years on his present farm of
seventy-seven and
a-half acres, was born in Union County, this State, March 20, 1838. His
father, Caleb Casper, was a native of North Carolina, and a farmer, who
removed from that State to what is now Union County in the fall of
1815. He was born November 6, 1812, and was a son of Peter Casper and
wife, who before her marriage was Miss Fullenwider. When the latter
came to Illinois, they brought with them a family of four children, of
whom Caleb was the second child and second son in order of birth. They
brought with them their cows and sheep, driving them on before, and
squatted on a large tract of land near
where Anna
and
Jonesborough now are. Afterward Mr. Casper added to his first claim by
purchase until he had about one thousand acres of
land, which was at that time very heavily timbered, some of which is
still unimproved, and is covered with oak and black walnut trees. This
land is now very valuable.
The grandparents of our
subject lived to a ripe old age, and reared a family of nine
children, four sons and five daughters, who all grew to adult age,
and
some of them are still living. The mother of these children died in
1842, at the age of sixty, of typhoid fever, which is believed to have
been the first case of
the kind in southern Illinois. The disease
became epidemic, and three of the family died of it within a few days.
Grandfather Casper lived until 1860, and died
at seventy-nine years,
leaving to each of his sons good tracts of wild lands, upon which they
made good homes. He was a great hunter, and every year went
on a
hunting expedition, and, it is thought, lengthened his life in this
way. He was a thoroughly enterprising and progressive farmer, and for
the period a well-informed man. His son Stephen was one of the finest
mathematicians in the country.
Caleb Casper, the
father of our subject, married Elizabeth Rich, daughter of Thomas and
Esther (Noah) Rich, who was born in Alabama, and came to
Illinois with
her parents about 1825. Mr. and Mrs. Casper first settled on one
hundred and sixty acres of land now owned by the Southern Illinois
Insane Asylum, but in 1842 sold out and removed to Western Saratoga,
Union County, where they remained two years, later removing to Elvira
Township,
Johnson County. Here the former died March 22, 1852, leaving
his widow with two sons and four daughters, viz: John F., Mary Jane,
Alice Ann, Esther, Francis Marion, and Elizabeth, deceased, the rest
all being still alive.
Our subject received
only a common-school education, but taught school two winters, and was
reared to hard labor on the farm. He has been married
twice; first at
twenty-two years of age, to Mary Ann Roberts, of Wayne County, Tenn.,
who bore him two daughters: Ella, who died at seventeen years;
and
Flora Ann, wife of A. J. Gourley, a farmer and physician living at Lake
Creek, Union County; they have
one daughter, Mertie A., a promising young
girl of seven years. Mr.
Casper was married the second time, to Annie C. Plater, of Jefferson
County, Ill., daughter of James A. and Catherine (Stull)
Plater, both
of Washington, D. C., and who were educated and cultured people, who
mingled in the best of Washington society. The former was a wealthy
planter on Sugar Creek bottom lands in Maryland, and with his wife and
family removed to Kaskaskia, Ill., about 1825, where they became warm
and
intimate friends of the first Governor of the State, Shadrach Bond.
They settled on the land upon which the widow now resides in Union
County, and reared
ten children, all of whom grew to maturity but one.
Mrs.
Casper was the
only daughter of this family, and now has seven brothers, of whom James
and William were in the War of the Rebellion, serving about
one year.
L. F. Plater is a lawyer of Elizabethtown, Hardin County, and James is
a druggist in Missouri, where his brother Thomas is a merchant.
William
and Joseph are farmers in southern Illinois. John is in Arkansas, and
Charles W. is a master mechanic living at Murphysborough. Ill.; he
has been
superintendent of bridge building on the Mobile &
Ohio Railroad, and is now in charge of that company's yards at
Murphysborough. William W. Plater
has an elegant farm adjoining the
city of Carbondale, Ill. The father of these children died at the old
farm home in 1867, aged sixty-four years. John F.
Casper was a farmer
in Elvira Township from 1858 to 1873, when he sold his farm there and
removed to his present farm, after which he bought seventy-
seven and
a-half acres with inconsiderable improvements, and moved into a small
log house, in which he lived a few years, when he erected his present
large and commodious dwelling. He has carried on general farming for
the most part, but has also done something in the way of growing and
shipping small fruits.
He has a fine apple orchard of eighteen acres,
and raises for his own use an abundance of apples, peaches, pears,
grapes, etc., and was the first man in this section to ship small
fruits and to utilize the fertilizers.
Mr.
and Mrs. Casper
have buried one little daughter, Elizabeth, who died at the age of eighteen months, and their living children
are: Lilly D., wife of M. C. Lawrence, residing at Simpson, Ill., who
had one child, Clyde, who died at the age of nineteen months; and
Luella B., wife of F. M. Chapman, who is living with Mr. Casper and
conducting the farm, and has one little son, Earl Clifton, the joy and
pride of the household. Our subject was a volunteer in the One Hundred
and Twentieth Illinois Infantry under Capt. J. T. Mozley, in which lie
enlisted as a private, on the 14th of August, 1862, and was discharged
in
the following December, on account of disability. He was School
Trustee nine years in Elvira Township, and County Commissioner of
Johnson County from 1879 to 1881, during which time the county was
relieved from a large debt of long standing except the railroad bonds.
He is a member of the Masonic fraternity, has been a Republican for
thirty years, and with his wife is an influential member of the
Christian Church.
transcribed by Nan Starjak
Source:
The
Biographical Review of Johnson, Massac, Pope and Hardin
Counties
Chicago
Biographical Publishing Co., 1893
pp 453 - 455
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