JAMES F. GILL
James F. Gill, who for four
years served the county well as auditor, is now residing upon his farm in
Garden Grove township. He was born upon
a farm near Columbus, Ohio, on the 1st of February, 1867, a son of
A. P. and Victoria (Spellman) Gill. The
father farmed in Ohio and after removing to Warren county, Iowa, in 1869,
continued to follow agricultural pursuits.
His wife passed away in that county, but he subsequently settled in
Oklahoma, where he was living at the time of his demise. He was a republican in political belief and
both he and his wife held membership in the Methodist Episcopal church. During the Civil war he fought for the
preservation of the Union as a member of an Ohio regiment and his wife’s only
brother, John Spellman, was made a captain before he was twenty years of
age. Spellman Post, G. A. R., at
Columbus, Ohio, is named in his honor.
To Mr. And Mrs. A. P. Gill were born six children: J. R., a resident of
Fargo, North Dakota; Mrs. Florence Shepard, of Sedgwick, Kansas; Mrs. May Wood,
of Sioux City, Iowa; James F.; Mrs. Bird Simpson, of Piedmont, Oklahoma; and
George, of Corpus Christi, Texas. The
paternal grandparents of our subject resided near Hilliards, Ohio.
James F. Gill received his
early education in the public schools of Warren County, Iowa, later completing
the course in the Normal School at Garden Grove. For several years he taught in Garden Grove
but in 1891 he went to Oklahoma, where he taught and also homesteaded a
claim. In 1894 he returned to Garden
Grove, but the following year went to Winterset and established the Winterset
Reporter, which paper he conducted until March, 1896, when he sold out. Under his management the Reporter gained a
place among the reliable papers of Madison county and it is now one of the
leading journals of that section. After
selling the Reporter, Mr. Gill resumed teaching, but in 1900 he was elected
auditor of Decatur county, being reelected in 1902 and during the four years
that he filled that position the work of the office was done promptly, accurate
land systematically. Upon the expiration
of his second term he became connected with an implement store in Garden Grove
but only remained there a year. Since
1906 he has resided upon his farm in Garden Grove township and has devoted much
attention to breeding high grade Belgian horses. H has some of the finest Belgian mares in the
county and his influence has done much to improve the standard of horses raised
in his locality. He also raises
Duroc-Jersey hogs and derives a good income from his stock-raising
interests. He owns eight acre of land
adjoining Garden Grove and also operates one hundred and ten acres of rented
land.
In February, 1895, Mr. Gill
married at Garden Grove, Miss Lenore Northrup, who was born in 1870, a daughter
of A. C. and Melissa (Brown) Northrup, a sketch of whom appears elsewhere in
this work. Mrs. Gill was reared at
Garden Grove and received her education in the public schools there and in the
Normal School and for eight years prior to her marriage engaged in
teaching. Mr. And Mrs. Gill have two
sons. G. Deane, a graduate of the Garden
Grove high school of the class of 1913, also studied for a year at Denver
University and is now teaching in this county.
Lester N. graduated from the high school at Garden Grove with the class
of 1915.
Mr. Gill is a republican and is an active worker in the party ranks. Fraternally he belongs to the Masonic order and his wife is identified with the Order of the Eastern Star and also with the Woman’s Christian Temperance Union. Mr. And Mrs. Gill are both adherents of the Presbyterian church and their cooperation can be depended upon to further movements seeking the advancement of their community along moral lines. Mr. Gill is very energetic and this trait, combined with his foresight and sound judgment, has enabled him to win a gratifying measure of success.