
Daniel H. RENDLEMAN, who
has lived upon his present farm for the past thirty-two years,
which
farm contains one hundred acres of land, is situated in section 24,
Goreville Township,
and was born in North Carolina in 1828. His father,
John RENDLEMAN, was a native of Cabarrus County, N. C., and was a son
of Drake H. RENDLEMAN, also of North Carolina
and a farmer. About 1881
he went to Louisiana, leaving his wife and son. an only child, and
resided there until his death, which occurred in 1888, when about
eighty-three years old. His
wife and child then lived with his father,
Drake H. RENDLEMAN.
Daniel H. when seventeen
years old began to learn the blacksmith's
trade, and worked at it for two years. On July 12, 1818, when he was
nineteen years old, he was married to Elizabeth M. PECK, of the same
place as himself. They began their married life on his
mother's farm
and his own little place of thirty-seven acres, running both the farm
and the blacksmith shop, the latter
being on his own land. They lived
there for seven years, and in the meantime three sons and one daughter
were born to
them, one of whom, George H., died at the age of two years. They
then
removed to Davidson County, N. C., in 1855, and lived there for five
years. In the year 1860 they removed to Johnson County, Ill., to their
present home, coming in true emigrant style,
in a covered wagon drawn
by a good team, and bringing with them a good tent. They were five
weeks on the way, camping and cooking as they came. They reached
Johnson County October
15, 1860. The family then consisted of Mr.
RENDLEMAN, his wife and their three children. When he started he had a
shotgun and a dog, but the dog he lost in crossing a river. Besides
these he had a crosscut saw and a fiddle, and other articles which were
equally valuable. In money, he had $750, and with this he
bought of H.
M. RIDENHOWER eighty acres of land, with
a log cabin upon it and five
acres cleared. For this eighty acres he gave $200. The family lived in
the little log house for four years, and then moved into a good hewed-
log house, which has
been their home ever since. This house has been
weatherboarded outside and ceiled inside, and now is to all appearances
a frame house, and fully as comfortable as if it were frame.
Our
subject's wife died on the 25th of July, 1891, aged sixty-two years.
She had borne him six sons and six daughters, of whom but two sons and
three daughters are now living: Mary A.,
wife of Wilson GOWER, of
Tunnel Hill, and who has three sons and three daughters; A. P., a
farmer and blacksmith near by, who married Elida EVANS, and who has
four sons and four daughters; Thomas L., who is managing his father's
farm, and who married Miss Pink STONE; they have one son and one
daughter; Martha Jane, wife of Frank HUBBARD, a farmer of
Goreville
Township, and who has two sons and one daughter; and Delia May, twelve
years old,at home. Mr. RENDLEMAN has buried John L., who died at his
father's house June 13,
1872, aged twenty-two years; Laeher Isabella,
wife of James HARRIS, who died in February, 1888, at the age of
twenty-three, leaving her husband and one son; Rufus M., who died May
7, 1889, a single man, aged nineteen; Julia Ann, wife of R. H. WHITE,
who died June 9, 1885, at the age of twenty-four, leaving her husband
and two daughters; Josephine, wife of James
HARRIS,
who died in March, 1892, at the age of eighteen; and Winfield SCOTT,
who died at Goreville, in April, 1892, aged thirty-three, leaving a
wife three sons and three daughters.
Mr. RENDLEMAN was married February
4, 1892 to Mrs. Benjamin PRITCHETT, nee McCORMACK,
daughter of
William D. and Martha (MOKE) McCORMACK, the former of
whom was from
Virginia, and the latter from Tennessee. They
came to Illinois in 1845, and died in this State, she in 1878, at
fifty-six years of age, and he in 1889, when seventy-eight years
old.
Mrs. RENDLEMAN lost her husband in 1889, and has buried three children:
Martha McINTRIEFF, at four years of age; Ida McINTRIEFF, at six and
a-half years, and George W. McINTRIEFF. She has five children
living:
Mary Ann KIMBLE, Jacob McINTRIEFF, Samuel McINTRIEFF, William T.
McINTRIEFF and Rosella McINTRIEFF. Mr. and Mrs.
RENDLEMAN are members
of the Methodist Episcopal Church. He has been a Republican all his
life, and expects to be as long as he lives. He is a man of
much more
than ordinary talent
and genius. Nature endowed him with rare
mechanical ingenuity and skill, and he can repair and adjust the parts
of a watch or clock or musical instrument readily and perfectly without
having served an apprenticeship, except at the blacksmith
trade. Had he
been educated to some of the nobler professions he must have risen to a
high rank. He is one of the men that revere God
and love their
fellow-men.
transcribed by Nan Starjak
Source:
The Biographical Review of Johnson, Massac, Pope and Hardin
Counties
Chicago
Biographical Publishing Co., 1893
pp. 272-275
Back to Biographies
M - Z
Back to
Johnson County
Copyright
© Genealogy Trails
All Rights Reserved with Full Rights Reserved for
Original Contributor