
Hiram H.. WISE, who has lived on his present farm of one hundred and
fifty-seven acres in section 2, township 11, range 4, for the past
thirty-two years, was born in Hardeman County,
Tenn., December 20,
1827, and is a son of William J. WISE, born in North Carolina in 1803.
The latter was a son of William WISE, of the same place, who was a
farmer and cooper,
and followed his trade much of his time. He was in
comfortable circumstances, owning a small farm and a cooper-shop. He
married Nancy HOWARD, of North Carolina, daughter of
Isaiah HOWARD, and
reared a family of five sons and three daughters, of whom William J.
was the second child and first son. The great-grandfather of the
subject of this sketch was Isaac
WISE, who was born and reared in
England, and came to the United States with two brothers, when a young
man, settling in North Carolina before the Revolutionary War broke out.
He
was
not a soldier in that war, but was drafted three times, and furnished a
substitute each time, and also furnished thirteen horses as
his contribution to American independence. He reared
a large family,
and died at the age of seventy years. The grandmother of our subject
died at the age of fifty-five, leaving the eight children mentioned
above.
William J. WISE married Rebecca LAWHON, of Wayne County, N. C., and
removed to Illinois in the fall of 1825, coming in the old-style cart,
with a two-horse tandem team. They
were some six weeks on the way, and
arrived in Illinois in October, and as many other families came over
the road with them, they all had an enjoyable journey, but about one
year later,
they returned South to Hardeman County, Tenn., where they
bought a farm and resided eleven years. In the spring of 1837 they
again came to Illinois, locating in Johnson County, having
sold their
possessions in Tennessee. At first, in Johnson County, he settled on
forty acres, but before his death he owned three hundred and twenty
acres in Burnside Township, which was
one of the finest farms in the
township. Some years later he sold out and made other purchases and
moves, and at length died at his home farm in Williamson County,
November 9, 1873,
nearly seventy years of age. His wife, the mother of
all his children, had died in 1871, aged sixty-seven. They had had ten
children, one of whom Mary A., died at three years of age, and
another,
Thomas C., died at seven. The children living at the time of her death
were as follows: Lewis E., who, when last heard from, was a resident of
Louisiana, and if alive would be
sixty-six years old, served in the
Confederate army in the late rebellion as a member of the Black Horse
Cavalry; Hiram is next in order; William J. is a retired farmer of
Union County;
Elizabeth J. was the widow of William R. MOUNCE, who died
in Andersonville Prison; Sarah Ann, Mrs. HALL, is deceased; Robert H.
resides in New Burnside; Curtis is a farmer of
Saline County; and
Oliver died in 1892, at New Burnside, aged forty-eight years.
Hiram H. WISE was reared a farmer boy in Tennessee and Illinois. He had
excellent opportunities for securing an education for the times in
which he then lived, and not only attended
the
district schools, but
also attended a High School kept by William H. MINNIS, now of
Washington, D. C., in the general land office. Our subject himself
taught school in early life for
some
fifteen years. He was married November 26, 1848, to Miss Polly,
daughter of George W. and Cynthia (JOB) CHAPMAN, who came with
their respective parents to Illinois at an
early day. George W. CHAPMAN
was born in New York in 1809, and was a son of Daniel CHAPMAN, a
Revolutionary soldier, who came to Illinois before it was a State,
and
who died here at a great age. He was the father of eleven
children. Mrs. WISE is one of her mother's six children, two sons and
four daughters. She was the first-born, the date of her
birth
having been December 25, 1832, and she is now the only one living of
the family. Mr. and Mrs. WISE were married at the home of the bride by
William BARNWELL, and have
resided ever since in this country. Mr.
WISE left his wife and six children at home on his farm then a
wilderness, and went to the front in the Sixth Illinois Cavalry,
Company B, September
10, 1861, and served until November 5, 1865.
He reached home November 26 following, on the seventeenth anniversary
of his wedding. He was in the Quartermaster's department, and
was
Chief Clerk of the Quartermaster's department of Alabama, and acted as
Adjutant about one year. He was not in good health, and but for his
ability as a clerk and scribe, he
would have been discharged in
April. 1864. He has practiced law considerably, having upon examination
been licensed to practice October 17, 1853.
Mr. and Mrs. WISE have buried six children, one son and one daughter in
infancy. William J. died at twenty-five years of age, in Kansas in
1882; Victoria, wife of Henry F. GOOD,
died at Stone Fort in 1879, at
the age of twenty, leaving one daughter; Riley M. died at ten years of
age. Those living are as follows: Thomas C., County Surveyor, who
resides in
New Burnside, and has a wife and seven children; F. M., a
farmer, living adjoining upon four hundred acres of land, who has a
wife and one daughter; George O., single; N. O.,
a traveling salesman;
and Charles II, single and a farmer near by. George W. CHAPMAN, the
father of Mrs. WISE, served in the Mexican War as a teamster, and was also in the
War of the Rebellion, but was
discharged on account of disability, after serving six months. He was
thrown from his horse and was kicked besides. He was sixty years old
when he
volunteered, and he died at Vienna at the age of sixty-six.
transcribed by Nan Starjak
Source:
The Biographical Review of Johnson, Massac, Pope and Hardin
Counties
Chicago
Biographical Publishing Co., 1893
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