Sam and Sidney Ann Duffield
KOB, DUFFIELD, PETTICORD
Story of the Lives of Samuel H. and Sidney Ann Duffield
Written by their granddaughter, Myrtle Petticord
Hughes (1904-1996)
Samuel Harry Duffield, son of Henry and
Margaret Klinepeter Duffield,
and Sidney Ann Kob, daughter of Lewis M. and Anna
Wimmer Kob, were
married Jan.26, 1879, at the bride's home northeast of
On the paternal side, Samuel was Irish. His great-grandfather, Patrick Duffield, was born in
date unknown, and died in Perry County,
Pennsylvania in 1831.
After being married at what we now call Kobville,
Samuel and Sidney went by wagon to Graham County in northwest Kansas, where
he had earlier filed on a homestead. There, in
a dug-out home, Anna and Ella were born, Anna on Feb.9, 1880, and Ella on April
21,
1881. Homesickness, draught, and grasshoppers brought the family back to
David L., were born.
In the spring of 1884 they moved to
In 1891 the family went by covered wagon to
following year, Leo Warren was born. In 1893
they returned to
where they spent the rest of their lives. Here
was born the baby, Avah Zelmina,
who passed away in 1903 at the age of 1 year, 9
months and 25 days.
The first house built on the Kobville farm by
Great Grandfather, Lewis Kob, was a log house. I'm
not sure whether there was more
than one log house. The one I remember seeing
was north of the two frame houses. The first frame house was the south house,
and
it was the last farm home of Lewis and Anna Kob. The north one of the two frame houses on the hilltop
was built for the use of Sam
and Sidney Duffield
and family. I think this was built in about 1893, when that family returned to
Our great-grandparents Kob lived in the south
house until 1898 or 1899, when with Jemima, the one daughter remaining at home,
went to
At this time, the Sam Duffield family moved
into the south house, which was slightly larger and more conveniently located
to the other
farm buildings. The north house became the
"honey" house, for Sam's honey bees. From the south house, all the
children (who did
marry) were married, and there the baby, Avah Zelmina, was born and died.
Great-grandfather Kob
passed away on
north house. This was about 1912-1913. Here,
Great-grandmother Kob passed away on
house until her
death in early 1937.
The third frame house, down near the road, was Leo's house. This he
built using materials from his
which he had torn down and shipped back to
house until Jemima's death in 1937, when they
moved into the "honey" house that she had lived in. Jemima had willed
this house and
the 40 acres of land on which it stood, to James Harry, Leo's younger
son, with the stipulation that Leo should have the use of it until
James Harry became of age. Later, Leo moved to
house from 1938 until 1943, when her health prevented
her from living alone.
The farm, as I have always known it, was 120 acres: three forties which
lay in a row, extending north and south a full mile and a
quarter mile wide, except the south forty,
which was 1/8 mile wide and a quarter mile long.
From Great-grandmother Kob, Jemima inherited
the north forty with its house, cave, and small chicken house. Grandmother
Sidney
Ann Duffield inherited the middle forty with
the south house and the set of fram buildings, and
cut in two by the railroad.
Kentner, the third daughter, inherited the
south forty, which had no buildings, but was located out on the main road. On
it her husband
Jack built a house, barn, etc. and in a few years traded it for a
property in
Our grandmother, Sidney Ann, lived out her life on her forty acres, so
that when she passed on in early 1940 she had lived there
continuously for 47 years. She had spent nearly
her entire life of 82 years on this farm.
Leo Duffield gave the property the name Kobville when he was writing weekly news items for the
in 1927. His weekly column was entitled "Kobville".
In earlier years, there had been a small settlement at the corner 3/4
mile south of the buildings, which was known as
this,
The farm has been in the Kob and Duffield families for more than 120 years and qualifies as
an Iowa Centennial farm.