CHARLES W. KELLY.
Charley W. Kelly owns and
operates eighty acres of good land in Grand River township, which he operates
in addition to the Emma Shewmaker farm, adjoining his own holdings. He was born in Van Buren county, Iowa, April
9, 1870, of the marriage of Richard and Sarah Jane (Nicholson) Kelly. His
father was born in Virginia but when sixteen years of age removed to Iowa, and
about 1875 settled in Decatur county, where he remained for a number of
years. He owned different tracts of land
and was quite successful financially.
Later he was for two years a resident of Oklahoma, after which he took
up his abode in Ringgold county, Iowa, where he was living at the time of his
death in August, 1907, when he had reached the age of seventy-two years. During the Civil war he served in the
Twenty-fifth Iowa Volunteer Infantry, remaining at the front for almost four
years. His political belief was that of
the republican party and he gave his religious allegiance to the United
Brethren church. Through his membership
in the Grand Army of the Republic he kept in touch with others who had served
the country in her hour of need. His wife was born in Indiana but when a child
accompanied her parents to Van Buren county, Iowa, whence the family
subsequently removed to Ringgold count, where both of her parents died. She passed to her reward in October, 1910,
when sixty-eight years of age. Her
religious faith was that of the Methodist church. Eight of the ten children born to Richard and
Sarah Jane Kelly survive, namely: Drue and Guy, residents of Decatur township;
Charley W.; Mrs. Ella Ferguson, of Arispe, Iowa; Mrs. Mary Aver, residing in
Los Angeles, California; Mrs. Jessie Hembry, who home is in Decatur township,
this county; Mrs. Gussie Lowder, of Fort Dodge, Iowa; and Mrs. Prudence Goodman,
of Clearfield, this state.
Charley W. Kelly was five
years of age when brought to this county and here grew to maturity. Through assisting his father with the work of
the home farm he gained knowledge which proved of great value to him when he
started out farming on his own account.
He now operates one hundred and fifty acres, eighty of which he owns,
the remainder comprising the Emma Shewmaker farm, which adjoins his place. He carries on general farming and
stock-raising and derives a good income annually from the sale of his grain and
stock.
Mr. Kelly was married, at
Benton, Iowa, on the 1st of February, 1897, to Miss Minnie M.
Brooks, who was born at Fort Dodge on the 8th of December,
1877. Her parents, Philander and Susan
(Middleton) Brooks, who were natives respectively Illinois and of Ohio, came to
Iowa in the early ‘70s and took up their residence near Fort Dodge. In 1886 they removed to Kansas and after
residing in Sumner and Cowley counties, that state, they removed to Major
county, Oklahoma, where they are now living, he at the age of fifty-nine years
and she at the age of fifty-six years.
He is by occupation a gardener.
Eight of the nine children born to them survive, namely: Mrs. Kelly;
Mrs. Kate Monroe; Mrs. Lucy Curtright, of Grand River township, this county;
Joseph, residing in Arkansas; Ernest of Coffeyville, Kansas; Mrs. Rose
Bushnell; Jessie, who married Claire Martin, a farmer of Major county,
Oklahoma; and Mrs. Goldie Garrett, who husband is engaged in farming near
Mingo, Oklahoma. Mrs. Kelly spent the
greater part of her girlhood in Kansas and attended the public schools in the
acquirement of an education. Mr. And
Mrs. Kelly have an adopted son, Harland H. Kelly, who is fourteen years of age.
Mr. Kelly is a republican and has served as trustee of Grand River township. Fraternally he belongs to the Modern Woodmen of America of Grand River. He is highly respected by his fellow citizens and there are many who hold him in warm regard.