1914 History pgs. 15-20
William Barber Ellis
William
Barber Ellis, deceased, was one of the pioneer agriculturists of Elk township and a man uniformly respected for his many sterling
qualities of mind and character. He was born in Castile, Genesee county, New York, January 9,
1827, and
was one of a family of four children whose parents were Thomas and Hannah
(Barber) Ellis, who spent their entire lives in the east. The educational
opportunities of the son were meager, but in the school of experience he
learned many valuable lessons and became recognized as a practical business man
of sound common sense and keen discrimination. He remained a resident of the
east until 1853, when at the age of twenty-six years he made his way westward
to Iowa and on the 15th of August of that
year entered a quarter section of land in Elk township, Delaware county. He
then returned to the east but in 1856 took up his permanent abode in this
county, remaining within its borders thereafter to the time of his death.
Mr. Ellis
was twice married. On the 10th of October, 1857, he wedded Miss Cordelia
Walton, whose birth
occurred in
Ohio in 1839 and who passed away August 16, 1865, leaving four children, as
follows: Isabel, now the wife of T. M. Smith of Sioux City; Cora, who died on
the 21st of May, 1890; Mary, the wife of Edward Cook of Manchester; and Rosetta
J., whose demise occurred July 25, 1897. On the 1st of October, 1866, Mr. Ellis
was again married, his second union being with Mrs. Julia Evans, who bore the
maiden name of Julia Charles and by whom he had five children, namely: Kitty,
who died December 7, 1912; Peter, of Honey Creek township; Remington, who passed
away December 19, 1890; Ella; and Jerusha, who died
December 4, 1868. Mrs. Julia Ellis passed away July 25,
1876, and
her death was deeply regretted by all who knew her, for she possessed many
sterling traits which endeared her to those with whom she came in contact.
Mr. Ellis
long survived, passing away March 9, 1905. He was a successful farmer and
stock raiser and by his well-directed business affairs became the possessor of
two hundred and eighty acres of fine land in Elk township,
which he brought to a high state of cultivation and to which he added many modern
improvements. He gave his political support to the republican
party and was a stanch advocate of its principles, yet never sought nor
held office, preferring to confine his attention to his private interests. He was
essentially a home man and found his greatest happiness at his own fireside. He
was a great reader of current publications and kept in touch with the questions
and problems of the age. He deserved much credit for what he accomplished and
his many sterling traits of character made him a citizen whose worth would have
been acknowledged in any community. He had many friends and the stanchest were those who had known him longest - a fact
that indicates the uprightness and integrity of his life.
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