
Alney H. ELKINS, who
belongs to one of the old families of Johnson
County, of whom an account is given in the sketch of Joshua ELKINS, was
a boy when war was declared between
the North and South, but before its
close, ere he had attained manhood, he showed himself to be a patriotic
lover of his country by enlisting as a soldier in defense of the Stars
and Stripes,
and acted well his part while in the army, he is now
performing his duty with equal fidelity in his capacity as a practical,
thrifty farmer, who is contributing his quota to the general prosperity
of this his native county as a rich agricultural centre, owning and
occupying a carefully tilled and well-equipped farm, pleasantly
situated on section 8, Elvira Township.
Our subject was born and reared within the precincts of Johnson County,
as was also his father, Waton ELKINS, the latter having first opened
his eyes to the light in one of the early pioneer homes of this section
founded by his parents, Richard and Sallie ELKINS. Waton ELKINS grew to
a stalwart manhood amid the primitive environments of a sparsely
settled country, and
manfully did his
share of hard labor in reclaiming land from its natural state and in
developing the agricultural resources of the region where he lived for
many years. He devoted the most of his
life to farming, but finally
removed to Cobden to spend his last days in retirement, and there death
came to him at a serene old age.
The subject of these lines was well drilled in the
occupation of a
farmer ere he was seventeen years old, working on the home farm until
that time, when he enlisted in Company D, Thirty-first Illinois
Infantry, in February, 1864. He was well endowed with
courage,
resolution and coolness in action and with other good soldierly
qualities, and during his many months' experience of
army life was
always at his post. He took part in some hard fighting,especially at
the engagement at Atlanta, Ga., and in numerous other battles that
occurred on his march with Sherman to the
sea. He also accompanied his
revered leader through the Carolinas and Virginia by the way of
Petersburg and Richmond, and on to Washington, where he marched in
the grand review of all
the Federal troops, and was honorably
discharged with his regiment at Louisville, Ky., July 19, 1865.
Returning to his home, the battle-worn, though youthful, veteran
quietly resumed his agricultural labors, in which he has been engaged
very successfully ever since, and he has a good farm of
one hundred
acres of fertile soil that he cultivates intelligently, with due regard
to the methods of agriculture best adapted to this region. He
is
constantly making improvements of a substantial order, and from the
products of his farm he derives a desirable income.
In all these years of his life as an independent farmer, Mr. ELKINS has
had the valuable assistance of an active and competent wife, who looks
carefully after the affairs of the household, and
is regardful of the
comfort of its members. She was united in marriage to our subject in
1867. Her former name was Mary STONE, and she was born in Missouri in
1847. She is a daughter of James and Millie STONE, natives respectively
of Tennessee and Virginia. Mr. and Mrs. ELKINS are blessed with six
children, who are named John, Clinton, Richard, James, Samantha and
Harrison.
Mr. ELKINS is a most estimable man, of exemplary habits and upright
conduct, and merits the regard which the people have for him, among
whom his life has been entirely spent, with the exception of that
trying period when he was at the front battling for his country. His
memories of the days and nights on Southern battlefields are kept alive
byhis membership in Vienna Post
No. 221, G. A.
R.; Politically, he is a stanch Republican.
transcribed by Nan Starjak
Source:
The Biographical Review of Johnson, Massac, Pope and Hardin
Counties
Chicago
Biographical Publishing Co., 1893
pp. 264-265
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