"A well-remembered old settler of Fayette county and
one of the brave officers of the Ninth Iowa Infantry was the late Lieut. Abner
Gilbert M. Neff, who was born in Westmoreland county,
Pennsylvania, in August, 1829, the son of John NEFF, a native
of Germany who emigrated to America in his youth. Abner Neff received a fairly
good English education and served as an apprentice to the shoemaker's trade in
his father's shop, and became an expert workman. He also studied medicine, but
did not complete the course. On October 27, 1851, he married, in Connellsville,
Pennsylvania, Anna HOBSON, daughter of John W. and Abigail
Bishop (SCOTT) HOBSON and a sister of the Hon. Joseph
HOBSON, of West Union. Her father was born in Peniston,
Yorkshire, England, August 22, 1794, and emigrated to America in 1816. While
living in Pennsylvania, in 1819, he was married to the daughter of JosephSCOTT,
a wealthy manufacturer there. Mrs. Hobson was born in New Jersey, April 10,
1799, and crossed the mountains on horseback with her parents during her
girlhood, the family coming to Fayette county, Iowa. They were originally from
Massachusetts, of English and Scotch descent. Mr. Hobson died of cholera,
August 14, 1834, his wife surviving many years, dying in 1883; their daughter,
wife of Mr. Neff, was born in Connellsville, Pennsylvania, October 29, 1829.
For
several years Mr. Neff engaged in the boot and shoe business at West Newton,
Pennsylvania. In June, 1856, he located in Fayette county, Iowa, opening a
shop at Auburn. His medical studies were interrupted by the Civil war, and in
August, 1861, he enlisted in Company F, Ninth Iowa Infantry, and on September
12th following was made first lieutenant. He was mortally wounded in the
battle of Pea Ridge, Arkansas, his first regular engagement, March 9, 1862,
receiving a gunshot wound in the region of the heart from the effects of which
he died on March 11, 1862, in the hospital. He was much esteemed by his
brother officers and men as a true soldier and a brave and faithful defender of
the country's cause.
Lieutenant Neff
was survived by a widow and five children, four sons and one daughter,
namely: John Devitt, born in Connellsville, Pennsylvania,
January 4, 1853, received a common school education and wedded Mary C. HARE
of Summerfield, Ohio; he died July 10, 1884, leaving a wife and two children,
Homer M. and Minnie M.; his wife survives
and is a teacher in the institute for the deaf at Olathe, Kansas. At sixteen
years of age he became a clerk in a drug store and two years later was appointed
deputy clerk of the court of Fayette county, filling the office until 1877, when
he embarked in the drug business at West Union. In the fall of 1880 he was
elected clerk of the court and re-elected in 1882, serving his second term at
the time of his death. Mary Elizabeth NEFF was born in
Connellsville, Pennsylvania, August 21, 1854, and became the wife of Rev. S. P.
MARSH, now of Birmingham, Alabama. Homer M. NEFF,
born in Connellsville, Pennsylvania, March 6, 1856, studied for the profession
of architect and engineer, at Chicago. Returning to West Union in 1881, he
served from 1884 to 1889 as clerk of the court. Since then he has carried on
the work of his chosen calling. Full sketches of Charles G. and Joseph H.
NEFF appear elsewhere in this work.
Mrs. Anna
NEFF, mother of these children, resides in Birmingham, Alabama. Mr.
Neff was a Republican, studious, honest, talented and a born leader of men, --
in short, a most estimable citizen. He was a member of the Independent Order of
Odd Fellows."