
Priulia DUNN is worthy of
the respect in which he is held as one of the
pioneers of Johnson County who has borne an active part in the
development of its agricultural resources, and in
promoting its growth.
He came here more than half a century ago in the vigor of early
manhood, and settling in the primeval forests of this section, bent all
his energies to the hard task of
hewing out a farm and building up a
home in what is now Vienna Township, and amid the peaceful scenes of
his former labors he is passing the declining years of a busy life in
serenity and
comfort.
Our subject was born in Robinson County, Tenn., June 12,1817, the sixth
child of Levi DUNN, a farmer and a tanner, who was also a native of
that county. He was killed while yet in the
prime of life by his team
running away with him. He was a son of Azariah DUNN, who was
an early
settler of Robinson County, where he had a farm, and was a man of
considerable
influence. He helped to build the first hewed-log house
erected in Nashville, Tenn. The parents of our subject had
the
following children: John, who died in Robinson County, Tenn.; Azariah,
who died in Tennessee; Henry, a farmer in Vienna Township; Jane and
Hannah, who died in Tennessee; Priulia; Alabutus, who died in
Tennessee; Levi, a resident of Tennessee; Calantha V., deceased, wife
of John JONES; and two who died in infancy.
Priulia DUNN had but very little chance to obtain an education, as
there were either no schools in his native place when he was a boy, or
they were irregular in session and the teachers incompetent.
He,
however, had an unlimited opportunity to learn farming on his father's
farm, and he made the old
homestead his home until he was twenty-one. That year he was married
to
Edna DRAUGOU, a native of Tennessee, and he decided to avail himself of
the advantages offered by the cheap lands and rich virgin soil of
Illinois to make a home for himself and bride.
The young couple
journeyed to their destination in Johnson County in a wagon, and after
his arrival Mr. DUNN selected his future dwelling-place in a dense
forest, his land lying on section
25, township 13, range 3, and this he
purchased of the Government. He lived with a brother for a
time, and
cleared some ground for a crop of corn, and when he had harvested it,
built a
log cabin, covered with clapboards, and moved into it. The
trees upon his place were the growth of centuries, and many of them
very large, and it required a great deal of hard labor to
remove them,
some of them having to be burned to get them out of the way.
He had to
saw his lumber with a whipsaw, and before that the floor of his cabin
had been made of puncheon.
He being one of the early settlers, he had
no near neighbors, and he and his wife often felt lonesome in the great
woods so far from their old friends, and often wished themselves back
in Tennessee. But hard work and plenty of it kept them from
repining
too much. They courageously faced the dangers and hardships
of life in
the wilderness, with its accompanying privations
and sacrifices, such
as the young people of to-day cannot realize. There were no
mills, no
schools and no churches, except at a great distance, and, of course, no
social advantages.
Mr. DUNN had the energy and ability to surmount the difficulties that
lay in his pathway, and in time had his land, to which he had added
forty acres by subsequent purchase, making eighty
acres in all, the
size of his present farm. This he has admirably tilled, and
made many
substantial improvements. In 1855 he built his present
residence, which
was the first good frame house
ever erected in this section of the
county, and his other buildings are of a good class. He is a
man of
sterling merit, upright in principle and in act, is well known in the
county, and is greatly esteemed by the people among whom he has lived
and labored so long.
Age has touched him but lightly, for although he has passed
the
milestone that marks a long and useful life of
seventy-five years, he
is in good health, and retains his mental and physical activity in a
remarkable degree. He still takes a deep interest iu all that
concerns
the township, especially in
educational matters, and is School
Director. He has been a member of the Township Board of
Trustees, and
has always done his duty as a loyal citizen. Politically, he
is a
strong supporter
of the Democratic party.
The
wife of our subject's early manhood died June 1, 1860, and was laid
to rest in Reid Cemetery, in what is now Grantsburg Township.
In 1862
he contracted a marriage with Elizabeth MEDDOWS, a native of
Kentucky.
She died in 1878, and her mortal remains were placed in the same
cemetery as those of his first wife. In 1880 Mr. DUNN was
married a
third time,
Mrs. Nancy SLACK, neeWYMORE, becoming his
wife. By
his first marriage Mr. DUNN had nine children: William S.,
who was a
soldier in the late war, and gave up his life for his
country at
Nashville, Tenn.; Miles R., a farmer in Johnson County;
Martha Jane,
wife of George CALHOUN, of Tunnel Hill; Edna Elizabeth, who is
deceased; James, a resident of
Metropolis; Charles A., a farmer in
Johnson County; Louisa, Mrs. GAGE, a resident of Johnson County; and
two who died in infancy. There was one child born of his
second wife,
Sarah Ann, wife of William WYMORE, of this county.
transcribed by Nan Starjak
Source:
The Biographical Review of Johnson, Massac, Pope and Hardin
Counties
Chicago
Biographical Publishing Co., 1893
pp. 285-286
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