Delaware County History pgs. 390-391
David Chrystal
David Chrystal, who passed away on the 4th of
September, 1913, in the seventy-first year of his age, was widely recognized as one of Delaware county's
most progressive and foremost farmers and stock-raisers, owning four hundred
and forty acres of valuable land on sections 17 and 18, Hazel Green township.
His demise was the occasion of deep and widespread regret, for he had been a
resident of this county for more than four decades and enjoyed the respect and
esteem of all with whom he was associated. His birth occurred in Scotland on the 10th
of November, 1842, his parents being Robert and Jane (Crowe) Chrystal,
who spent their entire lives in that country.
In 1870,
when about twenty-eight years of age, David Chrystal
crossed the Atlantic to the United States, landing at New York city on the 4th
of March. After a short visit with relatives in Canada he came to Delaware county, Iowa, and for a time was employed as a
farm hand in Hazel Green township. Possessing the sturdiness and thrift
characteristic of the Scotch race, he worked hard and saved his money and in
due time purchased a two hundred acre tract of land in Hazel Green township.
Subsequently he bought two hundred and forty acres more and this tract has
remained the family home to the present time. He' erected handsome residences,
barns and other outbuildings on both properties and in his undertakings won a
measure of success that gained him recognition among the substantial and most progressive
farmers and stock-raisers of the community. He likewise served as a director of
the Farmers Mutual Life Insurance Company and acted as secretary of the local
creamery.
On the
16th of December, 1880, Mr. Chrystal was united in
marriage to Miss Margaret Dunlap, a daughter of William and Eliza Dunlap, by
whom he had four sons, as follows: William R., who died in 1883; and Frank L.,
Harry and John George, all at home.
Mr. Chrystal was a stanch republican in politics and took an
active and helpful interest in public affairs, serving his township as trustee
and justice of the peace for a number of years. In his demise, which occurred on
the 4th of September, 1913, it was generally conceded that the
county had lost one of its most esteemed and valued citizens.
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