Lawrence W. Fern, a
farmer living on a farm of two hundred acres on section 5, township 12,
range 4, Johnson County, was born in Derbyshire, England,
in 1814, and was brought to the United States in the spring of 1820,
when he was six years old. His father, James Fern, was a
farmer, as was his father
before him. Grandfather Fern married Sarah Boulden, who was,
like her husband, quite well-to-do. They reared a large
family and died in England.
Lawrence W. Fern is one
of six children, four sons and two daughters, and the youngest of the
family. His father and family sailed from Liverpool for
New York with Capt. Collins, and were sixty-nine days on the way, on
account of becoming lost in a dense fog. It cleared up, however,and the
voyagers
found themselves on the coast of Nova Scotia. They had a very stormy
and dark passage, and frequently did not expect to escape ocean graves,
and though but six years old, Lawrence W. remembers the ocean voyage.
He was mature for his years, and one Sunday morning, while he was on
deck reading the Scripture to his father, there came up suddenly from a
clear sky a terrible storm, which, though of short duration, lashed the
ocean into a terrible fury, and
nearly engulfed their ship in the mountainous waves and chopping seas.
Mr. Fern was reared on
his father's farm in Otsego County, N. Y., where his parents, who were
in comfortable circumstances and gave their children a
good education, both died. Lawrence W. relates that when he was young
he caught muskrats and sold the skins in order to get money with which
to buy
books, which his parents refused to purchase for him, they thinking he
was reading too much. He had a natural taste for law, and though he
never graduated from any law school, was admitted to the Bar when
twenty-one years of age, after which he practiced his profession
somewhat in New York, yet his
vocation throughout life has been that of a farmer. He has also
practiced law to some extent since he came to Illinois. He was a Major
in the New York
militia, his commission being dated August 28, 1834, and signed by Gov.
William L. Marcy, and his Adjutant-General, Levi Hubbell. Mr. Fern left
New
York State in 1840, passing through Pennsylvania, and going down the
Ohio River after shopping a short time at Pittsburg. He then went on
south to Texas
by way of New Orleans in pursuit of health, being threatened with
consumption. In the spring of 1843 he removed from Vienna to the
neighborhood of his present home, having just previously come up the
Mississippi River from New Orleans to Vienna, and James Laskey had
selected him as the teacher for the subscription school of this place.
During the three years of his sojourn in the South he was engaged in
teaching schools of the same kind. He was married January 2, 1845, to
his present wife, Ellen Laskey, daughter of James and Rebecca (Dobbs)
Laskey, both of whom came from Kentucky, where Mrs.
Fern was born in 1821, in Wayne County. Her parents came to Illinois in
the spring of 1832, starting with their teams from Kentucky late in the
fall of
1831, and reaching Johnson County in March, 1832. On the way they
remained some time in Saline with two sick brothers, one of whom died
there.
Coming to Illinois with ample means, they settled in the woods as
squatters, camping in the woods until their log house was built. They
purchased and had deeded to them when the land came into market two
hundred and eighty acres of land, paying therefor $1.25 per acre.
When our subject was
married he purchased an improved forty acres, which had upon it a log
cabin such as were common in those days, in which they lived one year,
and then moved two miles to the southwest, where their son now lives.
Lawrence W. was a surveyor by profession, and was elected County
Surveyor, and in time purchased by deed one thousand acres in this
section of the State, for which he was laughed at by his neighbors for
being land poor.
His taxes, which were but $1 in 1846, rose not many years afterward to
$225, which in those days was considered an enormous amount to pay,
especially when money was so scarce. He has deeded to each of his seven
children a good farm, and for forty-five years previous to 1890 he paid
on the average
an annual sum in taxes of $45. Mr. Fern had not much means to start
with, so he taught school winters, and his wife fed the stock and cared
for the children, also driving off the wolves, which were numerous and
fierce.
Mr. and Mrs. Fern have
buried two children of their own and two by Mrs. Fern's first husband,
Simeon Ford, who died at the age of twenty-three years, leaving her
with these two children to support. The marriage of Mr. and Mrs. Fern
has been blessed by nine children, four sons and five daughters,
of
whom the following are still living, namely: William J., who is a physician at
Tunnel Hill, and has a wife, three sons and one daughter; Andrew J., a farmer
on a large scale, who has a wife, five sons and three daughters; Sarah
Ellen, wife of E. H. Lemons, a farmer of the vicinity, who has three
sons and six daughters; Missouri Lucretia, wife of J. J. Whiteside, a
merchant of Tunnel Hill, who has two sons and two daughters; Indiana
Luvina, wife of William
Simpson, who has five sons and two daughters; and Esther Frances, wife
of Alfred Willis, who has two sons and two daughters. Mr. and Mrs. Fern
have
forty grandchildren, and twenty great-grandchildren. Our subject has
always been in frail health, and while he has never been able to do
hard work, yet he
has been a very active and industrious man. He has been a Mason over
forty years, and has been a representative to the Grand Lodge. He is in
politics a Republican, and in religion a Missionary Baptist.