George W. Lauderdale
George W. LAUDERDALE, of New
Burnside, was born in Pope County, Ill.., June 16, 1842. His father
was Jacob Lauderdale, born in East Tennessee December 6, 1809, and a
farmer by occupation, whose father, William Lauderdale, was also a
farmer of East Tennessee, and was of German descent. William was the
father of a large family and died on his fine farm in the Elk River
bottom at the age of about sixty-five
years. He was married twice and Jacob was the youngest son by the first
wife. Jacob Lauderdale was married twice, his first wife dying early
and leaving no children. His second wife was Mary Ann, daughter of
Charles and Sarah Ann (Powell) Price. They were married in Pope County,
Ill., about 1832. He came to southern Illinois in 1828, when nineteen
years old, his brother John having come a few years previously. Like
the most of the pioneers he had but little cash capital, and so was
compelled to make his fortune by his labor. He at first located in Pope
County, township 12, squatting on one hundred and twenty acres of land,
on which he made his permanent home and to which he obtained a title
from the Government. He built a typical pioneer log cabin, which in the
course of years was superseded by a good hewed-log house.
Jacob Lauderdale
had a family of six sons and four daughters, namely: Mary Jane, who
became the wife of George Grisham, and who died at about the age of
twenty-eight years; John L., a farmer of Pope County; Charles W., a
farmer of
Johnson County; Jacob S., who was a farmer of Pope County, and who died
on his farm at the age of forty years; Stephen F., now living at Dixon
Springs, Pope County, a retired farmer, a lawyer, Township Treasurer
and a Justice of the Peace; George W.; David Oliver, who was a
volunteer in the War of the Rebellion, a member of Battery K, First
Illinois Light Artillery, and who served one year and died in a
hospital at Evansville, aged twenty-three; Sarah Elizabeth, the wife of
D. W. Franklin, a farmer of Pope County; Eliza Ann, wife of Abraham
Bailey, a farmer of Pope County; and Martha O, wife of William W.
Whiteside, for whose grandfather, Whiteside County, Ill., the only
county in the United States of that name, was named. Mr. and Mrs.
Whiteside reside in Georgia.
George W.
Lauderdale was not well educated in his boyhood, but was brought up to
plenty of toil and trouble on the farm. He left home at the age of
twenty and volunteered as a member of the One Hundred and Twentieth
Illinois Infantry, as did also his brother S. F., who was then
twenty-two years old. They were both in Company E of that regiment.
George W. was in the service but nine months when he was discharged on
account of disability. His brother served through the war and came out
at the end as a non-commissioned officer and without wounds. George W.
returned to his father's home, and one year later his health was so
much improved that he was able to attend school. He attended school
four months, and then taught school for some time. He was converted in
1869 to the Methodist faith and was soon engaged as an exhorter, and
was for the succeeding ten years a local preacher and farmer. His first
regular pastorate was in 1886 at Belknap, Johnson County, and he was
then on the Metropolis Circuit two years, at the Broughton Mission. The
work has always prospered under his ministry. He was married September
17, 1867, to Miss Viola A., daughter of Henry and Martha (Stogdon)
Baker, both of whom were from the South, he from North Carolina and she
from Tennessee, where Mrs. Lauderdale was born. Mr. Baker was born in
1798, and was a son of a Revolutionary soldier. Mr. and Mrs. Lauderdale
have buried two children, one
an infant son named Henry C., and one, Oscar, who died October 1, 1892,
in New Burnside, aged twenty-four years. He was an intelligent and
bright young man, and had taken a partial college course; he was also a
music teacher and a fine bass singer. This was a heavy loss to his
parents, and especially to the mother. They have four daughters,
namely: Emma Jane, a young lady at home, who had attended Howard
College; Pauline W., Georgie D. and Bertha Ann, all at home and the two
youngest in school. Mr. Lauderdale takes an interest in the political
issues of the day and votes the Prohibition ticket.
|
transcribed
by Nan Starjak
Source:
The
Biographical Review of Johnson, Massac, Pope and Hardin
Counties
Chicago
Biographical Publishing Co., 1893
pp 542-543
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