
Rev. John
S. WHITTENBERG was born in Blount County, E. Tenn., in 1823 and now
makes his home in Tunnel Hill Township, Johnson County. His father,
William WHITTENBERG, was born in 1803, on the same farm, and was a son
of Henry WHITTENBERG, Sr., who was born in Wittenberg, Germany, and
came to the United States in an early day. He was a man of limited
means, and settled in Blount County, Tenn., on wild land soon after the
Revolutionary War, while Tennessee was still a Territory. He married
Mary PATE, of German ancestry, with whom he lived happily for many
years and reared five sons and four daughters. Three of the former were
soldiers in the War of 1812 under Gen. Jackson. The names of these nine
children were as follows: Henry, Daniel, Joseph, Matthew, William
(father of Rev. John S.), Mary, Sarah, Betsy and Margaret, who all
became heads of families and lived to a good old age. The grandfather
of our subject removed to Illinois in 1840 or 1841 from Tennessee,
where e had acquired six hundred acres of land, out of which he gave
each of his sons a farm. Their son Joseph, and daughter Sarah, wife of
John PHILLIPS, were the first of the family to come to Illinois, which
was soon after it had become a State.
John PHILLIPS was the Representative of his county, Washington, several
years, and was one of the framers of the Constitution of the State.
Joseph WHITTENBERG went back to Tennessee and brought his aged parents
to Illinois on a visit, but they liked Illinois equally as well as
Tennessee, and sold their property in that State and made this their
home the rest of their lives, the mother dying at the age of eighty-one
years, being followed to the land of rest by her husband a few years
later. Both were intelligent people, retaining their strength and
mental faculties to the last, and belonged to the Methodist Church, of
which they were active members for a number of years. William
WHITTENBERG, the father of our subject, married Miss Nancy SMITH,
daughter of John M. SMITH, a Methodist clergymen possessed of much
ability, and a classical education. Mrs. WHITTENBERG was born March 7,
1800, in Virginia, in which State her mother, Nancy DYSON, who was
related to William Henry Harrison, President of the United States, was
also born. The parents of Rev. John S. WHITTENBERG were farmers in
Tennessee, where the father died in 1842, only thirty-nine years old,
leaving his widow and eight children, four sons and four daughters, and
having previously buried two infant sons. About two years after the
death of the father the remainder of the family moved to Henry County,
Tenn., and in the winter of 1845 came to Johnson County,Ill. Their
first home was in Grantsburg Township, where they entered forty acres
of land and bought thirty-six acres, upon which there was already a
little improvement, a few acres cleared and a small log cabin. Here
they made a good farm, which remained the home of the mother until her
death, June 24, 1868, in her sixty-ninth year, when her remains were
interred in the Salem Cemetery. Her husband and two children are buried
in Tennessee, and one son and a daughter are buried in Grantsburg
Township.
Rev. John S. WHITTENBERG and his sister Malinda, wife of Elilu VAUGHN,
reside in this township on good farms. Sarah, widow of Kit PETERSON,
resides in Goreville Township, and Matthew is a well-to-do farmer of
Pope County. Our subject was reared a farmer and had but nine months'
schooling before he was twelve years old, and attended school but
fifteen days during his fifteenth year. His mother was, however, well
educated and taught her children the common branches, which helped them
considerably, and all are at the present time well-informed young men
and women. One brother, William P., is a wealthy farmer in Bloomfield
Township. Rev. Mr. WHITTENBERG taught a term .of school when he was twenty-three years old, and
afterward taught during the winter months for thirty-five years,
becoming very efficient in that profession. He was School
Superintendent of Johnson County two terms, and organized the first
school institute in the county, conducting it himself for four years.
He has also been a local preacher in the Methodist Church for
thirty-two years.
Our subject was married February 15, 1853, to Isabella GREGG, of
Kentucky, but who was a resident of Metropolis. Massac County, this
State, and a daughter of William and Dorcas (CLAYTON) GREGG, who were
the first settlers of Massac County. Mr. GREGG was a farmer, and for
some years a hotelkeeper at Metropolis, and it was at his hotel that
Rev. Mr. WHITTENBERG met Miss Isabella and his fate. They began married
life in the log cabin on the same farm where they now live, which
comprised forty acres of new land. He added to the forty acres from
time to time until he owned over three hundred acres, some of which he
has since sold, and now owns only one hundred and eighty-five acres,
one hundred of which are under good cultivation. Living in the log
cabin a few years, Mr. WHITTENBERG built, in the fall of 1861, a part
of the present house, which is a good two-story building, partly frame
and partly hewed logs, weatherboarded and ceiled inside. He lived
economically and worked industriously until enabled to make an
improvement on it in 1867, and twenty-five years later added an
addition.
Rev. Mr. WHITTENBERG has taken ten degrees in Masonry and has been
connected with the Independent Order of Odd Fellows since 1877. He has
represented the Grand Masonic Lodge some fifteen times and takes a
strong stand in politics, being one of the organizers of the Republican
party in this county. He could not well avoid being a Republican, for
he had stood on the slave markets in the South and seen families
separated, at which all the finer sensibilities of human nature must
revolt. Mr. and Mrs. WHITTENBERG have lost four infant children, and
one son, John W., who died in his eighteenth year, and was a teacher
one year before his untimely death, in May, 1887. Our subject and his
wife have eight children living, two sons and six daughters, namely:
Ellen, wife of James HARRELL, who has three sons and four daughters;
Adeline, wife of G. W. HOOD, who has two sons and one daughter; Sarah,
a school teacher at Carboiulale; Necy, engaged in the millinery
business at Tunnel Hill Township; Belle, who is a young lady and at
home; Alonzo, a farmer and teacher, who was married to Eva RACE, and
has one daughter; William C., at home; and Flora, a young lady still
with her parents. Rev. Mr. WHITTENBERG is the youngest man of his years
in this part of the country and is still very active, engaging still in
some hard work. He inherited a splendid physical and mental nature,and
has done his share of the work of the world.
transcribed by Nan Starjak
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