BIOGRAPHICAL REVIEW OF CASS, SCHUYLER and BROWN COUNTIES, Illinois - 1892
Chicago: Biographical Review Publishing Co.
Page 452
DARIUS RUNKLE was born in Champagne county, Ohio, February 10, 1813. He was
the son of William and Mary (Pence) Runkle. William was born in Virginia and
went to Ohio in an early day, following his trade of tanner until about 1850,
when he came to Illinois, rented a farm in Morgan county and lived there until
the close of the war. He then came to near where his son now lives, and died,
aged eighty-four. His wife, also born in Virginia, died at the same place, aged
eighty-six. The Runkles came from Germany, and the grandparents of Darius lost
their parents on the trip over to this country.
Darius is one of ten children, four of whom are yet living. He remained at home
until twenty-one years of age, working at the tanning business and farming. He
had very limited schooling and is entirely a self-made man. After he was
twenty-one years old he worked for $10 a month for two years and then clerked
for a brother-in-law in a general store in Sidney, Ohio, for two years more. He
then started for Illinois, coming to Beardstown, and then walked over to
Doddsville, wading two miles in water. This was in the spring of 1837, and he
came to take charge of Samuel Dodd's general store. He continued in that for a
year and one-half, and during that time entered eighty acres which later he sold
and then bought 160 acres of wild land where he now lives. He also bought
another eighty acres in the timber. In the fall of 1838, he returned to Ohio and
remained with his father working in the tan yard for two years, and then came
back here and commenced improving his farm. He broke forty acres, built a
story-and-a-half house, and on October 12, 1840, he married Ann Maria Walker,
who was born in Adams county, Pennsylvania. She was the daughter of Andrew
Walker of Adams county, Pennsylvania, who came here in 1840, and settled on Mr.
Dodd's farm. Mrs. Runkle was one of nine children. Mr. and Mrs. Runkle have ten
living children. The sons are: James J., William, Charles W., Joseph C. and
Stephen A.; and the daughters: Mary A., Laura, Liny and Clara J. Mary A. had two
sons and four daughters: Clara J. two daughters and two sons; both the mothers
are deceased.
After marriage Mr. and Mrs. Runkle moved into the log house he had built, and
remained there until 1866, and then moved into his present fine home, which is
one of the best in McDonough, having cost $10,000 and being first class in every
particular. Mr. Runkle has built four or five different times where his sons
live, and has bought three farms with houses upon them. He commenced with $990,
and had to borrow $10 to enter his first eighty acres. He now has 3,000 acres of
land, 970 in Schuyler county and 1,940 in McDonough county, and he has given
each son a fine farm. He makes a specialty of fine stock, and has been engaged
in various kinds of business during his life. In 1841 he bought a stock of
goods, and was a merchant for two or three years, and was Postmaster in
1843-‘44; he also kept a stage. He was Supervisor of School Boards for years,
and he with two others built the first schoolhouse in this district, and it also
served as a church. He also loaned money to build a pioneer mill and tried to
get a railroad through this section. He has helped many a deserving and worthy
object. His wife has been a church member ever since their marriage, being one
of the first to take an active interest in church and Sunday school work in the
place. She was very active in everything tending toward the building of churches
and schools, and was a most worthy companion to as public-spirited man as Mr.
Runkle. Mr. Runkle can count his friends by the number of his acquaintances and
his enemies are now known. He treats every one well, and the deserving are never
turned away without help and words of cheer. Politically he has always
affiliated with the Whig and Republican parties. He voted first for Henry Clay,
and at the birth of the Republican party voted for Fillmore. He is very well
satisfied with Republican principles.
The following was written by Edward Young and typed from hand written notes left
in his desk by daughter, Betty Adair Blaquilt@macomb.com
Geneva Clugston (born sixteen days after me) and I started to Runkle School
where I finished. We hadn’t met since that time until in our late 90’s at the
Elms Nursing Home in Macomb. Her name was Geneva Gorsuch. My sister, Grace, and
I would walk to Runkle School and every now and then we would see Darius Runkle
riding a horse. We thought he was a fine old man. I remember him well. One
evening, I think it was in 1896, Father was summoned to the Runkle home. Mr.
Runkle was very sick and passed away that night. I remember going to the funeral
with my folks. The corpse was in a spring wagon or hack and everyone else was in
surreys, wagons or whatever they had. Darius was George Runkle’s father