Author Archives: oahblog

John Franklin McIntire

John Franklin McIntire
b. 22 August 1863, Pigeon Township, Warrick County, Indiana, to Andrew J. and Martha (Clark) McIntire
d. 18 January 1952, Sandoval, Marion County, Illinois

m. 8 June 1890, Oakland City, Pike County, Indiana
Louisa Rosa Catherine Ruff
b. 19 December 1871, Sugar Grove, Fairfield County, Ohio, to Phillip and Christine (Fassler) Ruff
d. 30 January 1943, Sandoval, Marion County, Illinois

Children with Louisa Rosa Catherine Ruff:

  • Ada (b. 1891)
  • Wilbur (b. 1894)
  • Jesse Franklin (b. 1896) (twin)
  • Dessie Prudence (b. 1896) (twin)
  • Marietta (b. 1900)
  • Gertrude Ellen (1903–1909)
  • Lillian Lucille (1906–1907)
  • Martha Mildred (1909–1926)
  • Hannah Beatrice (b. 1914)

John worked in the coal mines from the time he was nine years old. The family emigrated in
1910 from Petersburg, Pike County, Indiana, to Illinois.

Submitted by:
Virginia Anderson
Ramsey IL

George McCullough

George McCullough
b. 17 June 1780, County Antrim, Ireland
d. 25 September 1867, College Springs, Page County, Iowa

m. 1805, Ireland
Jennet Thompson
b. 5 August 1785, Rocavau, County Antrim, Ireland
d. 13 March 1859, College Springs, Page County, Iowa

Children with Jennet Thompson:

  • William (b. 1805)
  • Jennet (b. 1807)
  • John (b. 1809)
  • James Young (b. 1811)
  • Margaret (b. 1813)
  • Elizabeth (died young)
  • Elizabeth (b. 1817)
  • Sarah (b. 1819)
  • Jane (b. 1822)
  • Mary (b. 1824)
  • George (b. 1826)
  • Robert (b. 1828)

George immigrated to Indiana from Chester District, South Carolina, in 1830. He resided at
Vienna Township, Scott County, Indiana, and moved to Page County, Iowa, in 1858.

According to family tradition, after George and Jennet McCullough left Ireland in 1806, they were shipwrecked off the Bermuda Islands and detained there for a while by authorities. Six months after leaving Ireland, they arrived in South Carolina in May of 1807.

George’s grandson remembered that when the family emigrated from Indiana to Page County, Iowa, George, who was 78 years old, thought they were headed for a new promised land. Among his possessions in their covered wagon was a tombstone so that if he died on the way, his death would not go unnoted.

Submitted by:
Mrs. Lynne Emmons
Oshawa, Ontario, Canada

David McCoy

David McCoy
b. 2 May 1790, on the banks of the Catawba, Burke County, North Carolina
d. 25 March 1895, near Redlands, San Bernardino County, California

m. 21 December 1815, Casey County, Kentucky
Lucintha Davis
b. about 1797, possibly Casey County, Kentucky, to perhaps Landon Davis
d. 1877, Missouri

Children with Lucintha Davis:

  • Rebecca (b. 1817) married Abraham Langston
  • Matilda Ann (1820–1885) married James Nelson Sellers
  • Landon (b. ca. 1825–aft. 1895)
  • John A. (b. ca. 1833)
  • William Western (1835–aft. 1895) married Elizabeth [–?–]
  • David Hugh (1836–aft. 1895) married Susan Cargill
  • Lucintha (1838–1930) married William Thomas Morris

David immigrated to Indiana from Kentucky by 1820. He emigrated from Putnam County, Indiana, to Marie’s County, Missouri, about 1832.

On 4 December 1892, the San Francisco Daily Examiner ran a fourteen-inch long column on
David McCoy following his voting for Grover Cleveland at the age of 102.

Submitted by:
Gladys Sellers Hedstrom
Wheaton MD

Lucy Ann McCloughan

Lucy Ann McCloughan
b. 30 September 1851, Wayne Township, Kosciusko County, Indiana to Ira McCloughan and Catherine Sellers
d. 15 May 1936, Livingston County, Missouri

m. 25 December 1867, Livingston County, Missouri
Michael Lemon

Children with Michael Lemon:

  • Eugene Franklin
  • Mollie Gertrude
  • Katie Ann
  • Cora Belle
  • Oral Benton
  • Lura Lugene
  • Clarence M.
  • Maude Mae
  • Cressella

Submitted by:
Michael R. Darnel
Granger IN

Ira McCloughan

Ira McCloughan
b. 18 February 1819, Pennsylvania to Joseph H. and Elizabeth (McBride) McCloughan
d. 10 December 1866, Union, Livingston County, Missouri

m. 28 April 1842, Summit County, Ohio
Catherine Sellers
b. 22 October 1818, Portage or Summit County, Ohio, to George and Catherine [–?–] Sellers
d. 22 December 1880, Utica, Livingston County, Missouri

Children with Catherine Sellers:

  • Joseph Henry
  • John
  • Mary E.
  • Eliza Jane
  • Charles Wesley
  • Lucy Ann
  • Samuel Adam
  • Wilson Freeman
  • Willis Truman

Ira immigrated to Kosciusko County, Indiana, from Summit County, Ohio, in 1842. He moved to Livingston County, Missouri, in 1864/5.

Submitted by:
Michael R. Darnel
Granger IN

Jacob McCalla

Jacob McCalla
b. 9 March 1813, Unity, Columbiana County, Ohio, to Thomas and Lydia (Leibert) McCalla
d. 15 July 1902, Middleville, Wright County, Minnesota

m/1. 26 October 1837, Unity, Columbiana County, Ohio
Sarah Ann Steel
b. 6 December 1813, Pennsylvania
d. 8 June 1860, Union, Miami County, Indiana

m/2. 1864
Hannah Sheets
b. 1839, Columbiana County, Ohio

m/3. 1868
Mary Ann (Fish) Sweet
b. about 1826, Alabama

Children with Sarah Ann Steel:

  • Samuel (b. 1840)
  • Lydia A. (b. 1838)
  • Andrew (b. 1842)
  • Mary A. (b. 1843)
  • Nancy (b. 1846)
  • Thomas (b. 1848)
  • John (b. 1849)
  • William (b. 1853)

Children with Hannah Sheets:

  • Sarah A. (b. 1865)

Children with Mary Ann (Fish) Sweet:

  • Edgar (b. 1868)
  • Elsie (b. 1868)

Jacob McCalla immigrated to Indiana in 1852 from Jackson, Crawford County, Ohio, and resided at Union, Miami County, Indiana, until he moved to Middleville, Wright County, Minnesota, in 1866.

Submitted by:
C. X. McCalla, III, M.D.
Paoli IN

John McBain

John McBain
d. July 1822, Lawrence County, Illinois

m. July 1796, Jefferson County, Kentucky
Elizabeth Wilson
b. about 1778
d. 1830, Lawrence County, Illinois

Children with Elizabeth Wilson:

  • Rebecca
  • Mary
  • Ann
  • Penelope
  • Robert
  • Elizabeth

John immigrated to Knox County, Indiana, from Jefferson County, Kentucky, in 1810. He emigrated from Knox County, Indiana, to Edwards County, Illinois, in 1816.

Submitted by:
John Stutesman
San Francisco CA

George Harvey Marshall

George Harvey Marshall
b. 14 November 1828, Berkshire, Tioga County, New York, to Harvey George and Eunice (Hull) Marshall
d. 7 March 1902, Clackamas County, Oregon

m/1. 8 December 1850, Jennings County, Indiana
Susannah Jane Howlett
b. 5 April 1832, Columbia, Jennings County, Indiana
d. 6 May 1879, Clackamas County, Oregon

Children with Susannah Jane Howlett:

  • William Nelson
  • Lucy Ann
  • David Milton
  • Sarah Jane
  • Susan Eveline
  • John Alfred
  • Mary Alice Marshall

George immigrated with his parents to Jennings County, Indiana, about 1836 from Sheshequin, Bradford County, Pennsylvania. His parents helped establish the Flat Rock Baptist Church, and their home was a station on the Underground Railway, passing slaves through Indiana to Canada. Perhaps George helped too, but he was married and had children of his own by then.

He resided in Jackson Township, Ripley County, Indiana, and Columbia Township, Jennings County, Indiana.

George and his wife Susannah were married before her parents and siblings left Indiana, and they lived on her parents’ place. Their youngest son was just a baby when they left Indiana by train and settled in Eagle Creek, Clackamas County, Oregon, not far from where Susannah’s family had settled.

When Susannah died in 1879, she left small children. George then married a widow with small children of her own and had two sons by his second wife.

Submitted by:
Bethel L. Marshall
Boise ID

Samuel Marquart

Samuel Marquart
b. 17 April 1839, Perry County, Ohio, to Jonathan and Catherine (Bashore) Marquart
d. 22 May 1923, Lake Arthur, Jefferson Davis Parish, Louisiana

m. 17 February 1861, Fontanelle, Adair County, Iowa
Susanna Emerson Miller
b. 7 August 1845, Columbia County, Pennsylvania, to George and Mary Jane (Histe) Miller
d. 23 November 1902, Lake Arthur, Jefferson Davis Parish, Louisiana

Children with Susannah Miller:

  • Ida A. (b. 16 August 1863) married George B. Baker
  • Samuel Lorn (14 May 1867–18 July 1870)
  • Oran Glen (b. 16 November 1869) married Edith Mae Segrist
  • Emerson Lavern “Vern” (b. 5 September 1886) married Lelia Vencent August

Samuel immigrated to Marion Township, Allen County, Indiana, with his parents when he was four or five months old, in the fall of 1839. He moved to Marshall County, Indiana, in 1850 but soon afterward moved back to Allen County, Indiana. He joined the George Miller family in moving to Fontanelle, Somerset Township, Adair County, Iowa, in the summer of 1857.

In 1866, Samuel’s brother, Frederick and his son Daniel W. Marquart, joined Samuel in Fontanelle, where Daniel married Sam’s wife’s sister, Mary Etta Miller, on 18 March 1868.

In February 1898, Samuel, with his nephew Daniel W. Marquart, and ten other men, organized a party to go to the Klondike gold fields. They tried to get through to Dawson by way of White Horse Pass, but snows in the mountains proved too great an obstacle. They returned without reaching the gold fields.

Submitted by:
Virgil V. Marquart
Fort Wayne IN

Daniel Whitaker Marquart

Daniel Whitaker Marquart
b. 16 February 1848, Marion Township, Allen County, Indiana, to Frederick (1820–1886) and Anna Marie (Whitaker) Marquart
d. 11 September 1900, Louisville, Kentucky

m. 18 March 1868, Fontanelle, Adair County, Iowa
Mary Etta Miller
b. 7 August 1847, Columbiana County, Ohio
d. 11 June 1932, Norman, Cleveland County, Oklahoma

Children with Mary Etta Miller:

  • Gertrude Eve (1870–1931)
  • Vide Alma (1872–1956)
  • Webb E. (1875–1880)

Daniel was nearly four months old when his mother died in June 1848, and he was raised by his two grandmothers. He enlisted in the U.S. Army at age 16 by falsifying his age and served during the Civil War in Company H, 91st Regiment, Indiana Infantry. He was 5 feet 3/4 inches tall when he enlisted and had black eyes, brown hair, and dark complexion.

In 1866, Daniel and his father left Allen County Indiana to join his uncle Samuel Marquart in Fontanelle, Adair County, Iowa, where Daniel married Mary Etta Miller, who was the sister of Daniel’s Uncle Samuel’s wife.

A biography in an 1884 history of Guthrie and Adair counties, Iowa, states that Daniel “followed school teaching and various other occupations for several years, after which he assisted his father in the post office.” His father was postmaster from 1868 to 1870 and from 1872 to 1882. Daniel then operated a general merchandise store until he moved to Greenfield in January 1878 to serve as Adair County auditor from 1877 to 1883.

When President Harrison declared the Oklahoma Indian Territory open for settlement in 1889, Daniel, with his uncle, Samuel Marquart, and cousins, Oren and Eugene, were in the crowd waiting to enter at noon. Eugene developed a terrible thirst and patronized a man who was selling water from barrels on his wagon at twenty-five cents per cup. After several cups, the others talked Eugene out of his thirst.

In October 1889, D. W., then postmaster, was unanimously elected mayor of Norman, Oklahoma. In February 1898, D. W. and his Uncle Samuel, along with ten other men,
organized a party to go to the Klondike gold fields. They undertook to get through to Dawson by way of White Horse Pass, but snows in the mountains proved too great an obstacle, and they were forced to return without reaching the gold fields.

While visiting a doctor in Louisville, Kentucky, in September 1900, D. W. Marquart died, not having reached the age of fifty-three, but having held many positions of honor during his short life span.

Submitted by:
Virgil V. Marquart
Fort Wayne IN