"Portrait and Biographical Album of Fulton County, Illinois - 1890" Pages 335 & 336
IRA J. GRAHAM,
one of the younger farmers of the county, owns and
occupies a portion of the parental homestead in Isabel Township. He was
born there on August 24, 1850, reared amid the suroundings of farm life
and attended school in the log schoolhouse of that period. The temple of
learning was furnished with seats made of slabs, with wooden pins for
legs, and the other primitive
conveniences which our forefathers so well knew. The advantages for
acquiring an education were
very poor and our subject learned much more at home than at school.
As might be expected, he
began assisting in farm work as soon as he was large enough and became
proficient in its various
departments at an early age.
At the age of twenty-two years our subject began
working for himself, laboring by the month for several years. After the
death of his father in the summer of 1873, he and his brother, Jesse P.,
bought the homestead of three hundred and twenty acres. They farmed
it together for thirteen
years, sold off fifty-six acres and then divided the remainder, our
subject taking possession of the south half of the property. It is supplied
with comfortable quarters for man and beast and shelter for the crops produced
by the industrious efforts of the owner. Mr. Graham possesses considerable
mechanical genius and is able to supply himself with conveniences that
he might otherwise be denied.
Although his school advantages were not equal to
those enjoyed by the youth of this day, Mr.
Graham has improved the opportunities afforded him to acquire information
on various topics, and
is classed among the intelligent, as well as the honest, hard-working
citizens. He has held some of
the minor offices in the township and casts his vote with the Democrats.
His congenial home-life is
secured through the companionship of an estimable lady who became his
wife December 24,
1886. She was born in this county, near Smithfield, is a daughter of
Gedion and Matilda Graham, and bears the given name of Rachel M. She is
a cousin of her husband, therefore of equally good
blood, and was reared to the habits of usefulness, developing her excellent
traits of character.
John and William Graham, father and grandfather of our subject, were
born in Maryland, whither
the preceding generation had come from Ireland. William Graham served
in the War of 1812 under
Gen. Harrison. When about in middle life he crossed the mountains with
a team and wagon and
settled in Piqua County, Ohio. Six years later he removed to Ross County,
in which he spent the
remnant of his days, dying at the age of sixty-seven years, and being
interred in the cemetery at
Brown's Chapel. His occupation was that of a farmer and his character
a reputable one.
John Graham was born October 1, 1804, and was the eldest of six children,
the others bearing the
names of George W., Jefferson, William, Elizabeth (Mrs. DeVair), and
Ira J. He was about four
years old when his parents removed to Ohio, where he was reared on
the
farm and attended the
pioneer schools in Piqua and Ross Counties. He was married in Fayette
County and settled on a
rented farm, occupying it until 1842, when he removed to this state
and county. He made the
journey with team and wagon, and upon his arrival here had but fifty
cents in money. Finding a
neighbor who seemed to be in poorer circumstances than himself, he
loaned his small amount of cash to that gentleman. The first settlement
made by Mr. Graham was in the Spoon River Bottom, but a year later he purchased
three hundred and twenty acres on section 21, Isabel Township. Deer and
wolves were numerous in this vicinityat that time and he did considerable
hunting. His land was covered with a heavy growth of timber, which he cut
down, gradually bringing the acreage under thorough cultivation.
His first dwelling thereon was a log house which
was occupied eighteen years, after which a fine, commodious frame residence
became the family home. Excellent improvements of various kinds
were made, and Mr. Graham reaped the results of his efforts in abundant
crops; his death occurred
July 31, 1873.
The mother of our subject bore the maiden name of Malinda Thomas, and
was born in Fayette
County, Ohio, March 23, 1818. She is still living on the homestead.
Her father, John Thomas, was
of Scotch-Irish descent, and her mother, Elizabeth (Emberline) Thomas,
was the daughter of a lady
and gentleman, who had emigrated from Germany to this country. The
record of the children of
John and Malinda (Thomas) Graham is as follows: Mahala, born February
6, 1837; William A.,
January 22, 1839; Elizabeth J., November 3, 1840; Thomas J., October
26, 1842; Mary E., February 18, 1845; Francis M., June 22, 1848; Ira J.,
August 24, 1850; George W., December 30, 1852; Jesse P.*, March 13,
1855; Jasper R., September 23, 1857; James O., August 18, 1860.