
Preston
HARNER, who did his duty right nobly as a brave and patriotic soldier
when war threatened this country with disunion and destruction, was one
of the early settlers of
Bloomfleld Township, where he owns and occupies a fine farm, which he
purchased nearly half a century ago, and has since redeemed from the
wilderness.
Our subject was born in Knox County, Tenn., December 28, 1817. His
father, Philip Harner, was a native of Wythe County, Va., and a son of
Christopher Harner, who was
born in this country, but was of German antecedents. He removed from
Virginia to Knox County, Tenn., and later to Hardin County, where he
died. Philip Harner was a young man
when he left his early Virginian home to live in Tennessee. He was
married there to Miss Katie Copras, who is thought to have been born in
Virginia. She died in Knox County in
1819, and the father married a second time. After marriage Mr. Harner
continued his residence in Knox County until 1819, when he removed to
Roane County, and settled ten miles
from Kingston. Six years later he went from there to Hardin County,
bought land and improved a farm, and resided there until 1846. In that
year he left Tennessee to avail himself of
the advantages offered by the cheap land and rich soil of Illinois, and
coming to Johnson County, he entered a tract of land from the
Government in what is now Bloomfield Township.
He built upon it, improved the land, and made it his home until death
closed his mortal career.
The subject of this sketch lost his own mother before his remembrance,
and was reared by a step-mother. He remained an inmate of the parental
home until he was fourteen years
old, and at that age commenced to learn the trade of saddler, at which
he worked ten months. Returning home, he remained three months, and
after that he worked at the trade of a
shoemaker a few months. His next employment was as a farm hand, and he
continued working out by the month in Hardin County for some time. He
was there married, in his twenty-third
year, and from that time farmed on his own account on rented land until
1844. In January of that year he came to Illinois, traveling by the way
of the Tennessee and Ohio Rivers on a
flatboat, bringing household goods, stock and tools. After his arrival
he bought a claim to a tract of Government land in what is now
Bloomfield Township, on which a log cabin had been
built for a dwelling for his family. The same year he exchanged that
claim for the one where he now lives, and later entered it from the
Government at $1.25 an acre. This purchase included
eighty acres of land, and there was a log house on the place when it
came into his possession, He has since bought other land, and now has a
fertile and well-cultivated farm of one hundred
and sixty-seven acres, which is provided with good buildings and is
otherwise finely improved. The work that he has accomplished in
reclaiming this choice farm from a state of nature
entitles Mr. Harner to an honorable place among the most useful
pioneers of the county, to whose development he has thus materially
contributed. When he came here this and adjoining
counties were but sparsely settled, most of the land was owned by the
Government, and there were but few improvements. There were no railways
for several years, and deer and other
kinds of wild game were plentiful, roaming at will over the prairies
and through the forests. Our subject is also worthy of all respect for
his conduct during the war, when he threw aside his
work to take his place among the defenders of our country's honor. When
Ft. Sumter was fired upon, his patriotism was aroused, and believing
with all his heart that the Union should be
preserved, he offered his services to assist in its salvation,
enlisting in Company I, One Hundred and Twentieth Illinois Infantry,
and during the three long and trying years that followed he
had a full experience of the trials and privations of a soldier's life,
and displayed good fighting qualities whenever his regiment met the
enemy in battle. He was discharged after being in the
army three years and twenty days, on account of the expiration of his
term of enlistment. He voted for Abraham Lincoln in 1864, and is still
a Republican, though he now votes with the
People's party. He and his wife are members in high standing of the
Baptist Church.
Mr. Harner
was married in November, 1841, to Nancy, daughter of William and
Margaret Shelly, and a native of Trigg County, Ky. To her and our
subject have been born three children:
Eliza A., wife of Jerome Watkins, and mother of six children; John C.
B., who married Sarah J. Parker, and has four children; and Martha A.
who married Thomas Darter, and has five
living children and one deceased.
transcribed by Nan Starjak
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