
Joseph P. WOODSIDE was
born in Calloway County, Ky., July 6, 1821. He
is a son of William WOODSIDE, a Virginian farmer, whose father
was an
Irishman. William WOODSIDE was
born in 1775, and was married in
Kentucky to Mary ROWLET, of that State, in 1805. Miss ROWLET's father
was a wealthy Kentucky planter, owning more than twenty slaves, and
William WOODSIDE was his overseer. Mr. ROWLET died in Shelby
County, Tenn., and left a valuable estate to his five children, four
sons and one daughter. The wife of William WOODSIDE died
in 1832, in
the prime of life, leaving nine children. She had had eleven, but two
of them died before her death. In all, there were nine sons and two
daughters, and Joseph P. was the ninth child
and seventh son. Of the
nine that survived their mother two died in early childhood, and seven
reached adult age.
Joseph P., our subject, was reared from the age of six to sixteen years
by his mother's sister. He was brought up on the farm, without
opportunities to secure
any education that are worth mentioning. At the age of sixteen he
began life for himself as a flatboatman on the Ohio and Mississippi
Rivers. While this was for him a hard life, yet it brought good pay, as
high as $30 per
month. He followed this life about six years, and at
the age of twenty-three was married to Mrs. Dicy SNIDER, nee GRIFFIN,
a daughter of Cannon and Winaford (WAMAC) GRIFFIN,
who were natives of
North Carolina and Georgia respectively. He came to Illinois in the
spring of 1845, reaching here April 3, and remaining about three
months, when he went back to
Memphis, Tenn., and also to his former
occupation, that of boating. In the spring of 1848 he returned to
Illinois, locating in Johnson County, and was married, as above stated,
July 23, 1848.
He began life then on a rented farm, remaining on this
place one year. He then bought a claimant's improvements and remained
on this farm until 1852, after which he sold out and removed to
the
home where he now lives, taking up one hundred and sixty acres of land,
which he deeded in 1865. His first house was a double log cabin, 16x16
feet in size, with a large stick and clay chimney in the middle. This
chimney he replaced with a good stone one within a few years, and in
1869 he built his present large one-story frame-house, 18x44 feet, and
of five rooms, with
two good stone chimneys.
Mr. WOODSIDE has been a servant of the people nearly all the time he
has lived among them, serving as a school officer and Justice of the
Peace twelve years, and in the latter capacity he
has tried many a
case, and has tied many hymeneal knots. He has held office under both
Democratic and Republican regimes, but in the main he votes the
Democratic ticket. He is not,
however, radical in his views. Mr. and
Mrs. WOODSIDE have buried five children: John, who died March 15, 1870,
aged thirteen years; Julia who died December 5, 1873, aged twelve;
and
Thomas Benton, who died February 2, 1891, aged thirty-six, and left six
orphan children, who have been cared for by their grandparents. Besides
these they lost an infant son and daughter. The remaining children of
Mr. and Mrs. WOODSIDE are two sons and two daughters, viz.: William, a
Batpist preacher, who
has a wife, two sons and four daughters; Alexander L.; Mary E.,
now
Mrs. RUSHING; and Lucy, now Mrs YANDLE.
transcribed by Nan Starjak
Source:
The Biographical Review of Johnson, Massac, Pope and Hardin
Counties
Chicago
Biographical Publishing Co., 1893
pp. 268-269
Back to Biographies
M - Z
Back to
Johnson County
Copyright
© Genealogy Trails
All Rights Reserved with Full Rights Reserved for
Original Contributor