McCLAIN,
ARTHUR
A prominent citizen and veteran of the Civil
war, now residing in Indian Creek township, Mills county, Iowa, is
Arthur McClain, the subject of this sketch. He is a son of John and
Mary (Stephenson) McClain, and was born in Knox county, Ohio. The
parents of our subject settled first in that county, and in 1853
moved to Indiana, our subject being then about fifteen years old. The
mother of our subject was born in Ohio, and died there when about
thirty-three years old, leaving six children, who in turn married and
had families of their own. The paternal grandfather was Arthur
McClain and his wife was a native of Pennsylvania, who passed her
last days in Knox county, Ohio. The maternal grandparents of our
subject were John and Ann Stephenson, the former of whom was born in
Ireland, and came to America when he was about fourteen years old.
This was a pioneer family in Ohio.
In 1866, our subject was married to Miss
Caroline Murray, a daughter of Alexander and Mary A. (Wyman) Murray,
the former of whom was born in Schenectady, New York, in 1805, and
died in Livingston county, in that state, in 1861, having been
engaged in farming all his life. The mother of Mrs. McClain was born
in Genesee county, same state, four of her family of five children
surviving. Mrs. McClain's paternal grandparents were James and Nellie
(Thompson) Murray, natives of New York, who lived and died there, and
her maternal grandparents were Warren and Caroline (Roe) Wyman, the
former a native of Vermont, who died in New York, the latter a native
of New York, who spent her whole life there. Both of these families
are old and prominent, having descendants in many states of the
Union.
The children born to our subject and wife
are: Rev. Albert M., a Presbyterian minister and superintendent of
the Nez Perce Indians in Idaho and has two children; John Henry, who
has one daughter; Carl A., a school teacher in this township; Marian
F., who is attending school in Omaha, Nebraska; and Lulu M., a
student of the Emerson school. All of these children have been well
educated. Mr. McClain taking a deep interest in educational matters
in his district.
On September 18, 1861, Mr. McClain enlisted
in the Union army and gave faithful service to his country until
October 27, 1864, when he was mustered out. His service was for three
years, when he answered the call that was made for three hundred
thousand men and entered Company K, Thirty-seventh Indiana
Volunteers, under Captain John McKee, who lost his life in the battle
of Stone River. Under Captain John B. Reeve, our subject accompanied
his regiment through many serious engagements, was captured by the
enemy at Pulaski, Tennessee, and paroled, later was taken sick and
obliged to spend some time in the military hospitals at Nashville and
Murfreesboro. Mr. McClain was present at the battle of Chickamauga,
Lookout Mountain, Missionary Ridge, Kenesaw and almost all the
important battles of the army of the Cumberland. For one hundred and
twenty days our subject was continually engaged, finally reaching
Atlanta with his regiment.
The first time that our subject voted the
Republican ticket was in the first campaign of Abraham Lincoln, since
which time he has never wavered in his allegiance to that party. He
is a charter member of the G.A.R. post at Emerson, in which he takes
an active interest.
Few men have seen more of the horrors of war
than our subject, and few veterans can show a better record. His
devotion to his country was sincere, and when sick in the hospital
and offered a furlough he would not accept it, hoping sooner thereby
to be able to return to the battlefield. Mr. McClain possesses the
esteem and confidence of his fellow citizens and may be considered a
representative man of Indian Creek township.

McCLENAHAN,
AUGUSTUS
Among the prominent and successful farmers
of Mills county, Iowa, who enjoys the esteem and confidence of his
fellow citizens must be named the subject of the present review,
Augustus McClenahan, who resides upon section 11, Anderson township.
He was born in Trader's Point, Iowa, August 18, 1848. He was the son
of Robert McClenahan, who was born in Kentucky, in 1807, and died at
Trader's Point, Iowa, on December 10, 1852. While still a very young
man Robert McClenahan took up his residence in Stark county, Ohio,
teaching school there, also in central Illinois, and after his
removal to Iowa. In Ohio he made the acquaintance of, and married,
Lucy A. Richards, of Stark county, a daughter of Augustus Richards
and his wife, who belonged to the old Doggett family of Virginia Mr.
and Mrs. McClenahan came to Iowa in 1846 and were among the very
first settlers of Mills county, where they reared their family: Mary
Ellen, the wife of Daniel Hougas; Frances Elizabeth, the wife of G.
P. Schenck, of Montgomery county; and our subject. The father lived
until death at Trader's Point, after which the mother married
Jeremiah Bunker and bore him one daughter, now Mrs. Gifford, a
resident of Carson, Iowa. Mr. Bunker died in Nebraska, and she
survived many years, passing away in June 1897.
Brought up on a farm and accustomed to
agriculture, our subject has made a success of his life work. His
educational advantages, like those of many others of his day, were
limited but native good sense and a sterling character have supplied
all deficiencies. It was on the 23d of October, 1872, that he was
married to Miss Mary I Schenck, a native of Indiana, who was born in
1850 and was a daughter of James M. and Alzina (Fisher) Schenck, both
of whom are deceased.
Our subject remained on the farm where his
mother had settled in 1855, also becoming the possessor of a land
warrant of eighty acres from his grandfather Richards, who had been a
soldier of the war of 1812. He now has a finely stocked and well
cultivated farm of three hundred and twenty-six acres with eight
acres of timber land additional. He raises corn, wheat, oats, but
principally corn, some years harvesting from six to eight thousand
bushels in all. He also raises Poland China hogs and breeds colts,
and owns some twenty horses.
The children of Mr. and Mrs. McClenahan have
grown up around their hearth to be the comfort of their declining
years. The oldest child was an infant that died when but five months
old; Maud is the wife of R. E. Stone and has a little son, Sylvan;
Pearl May is a teacher and lives at home; Robert Vernon and Lucy
Edna, twins, are eighteen years old and live at home; Edna is a
graduate of the Henderson high school; Ralph W.; and Inez, a bright
little ten year old school girl. Pearl May was graduated at
Shenandoah College and taught her first term of school in the
Henderson high school, remaining a year. She is accomplished in
music, and the musical talent seems to have been given to the whole
family.
As a Republican Mr. McClenahan has always
done his whole political duty, and his neighbors have honored him
with their confidence, appointing him school director for twenty-five
years. He was made treasurer before he was twenty-one years
old.
Few homes are more happily placed than that
of our genial subject and his excellent wife. Generous and
liberal-minded, Mr. McClenahan makes friends in every direction, and
is much interested in making his children happy by providing them
with educational advantages. A new library is being added to the
other comforts of the home.

McCOY, CASPER
Pennsylvania has furnished many pioneers to
the west whose natural industry and business ability made them
prominent wherever they located. Of such stock came Casper O. McCoy,
a well known farmer of Ingraham township, Mills county, Iowa, who
owns and lives on a fine six-hundred acre farm not far from Silver
City.
Casper O. McCoy was born near Uniontown, the
seat of justice of Fayette county, Pennsylvania, January 5, 1829, a
son of James McCoy, who was born there in 1804 and died in Ingraham
township, Mills county, Iowa , in 1865. James McCoy married Margaret
Graham, a native of Pennsylvania, who was reared there in a German
family, and in 1839 they went with teams from Pennsylvania to Fulton,
Whiteside county, Illinois, where they remained during the winter of
1839-40. In the spring of 1840 they moved on to Scott county, Iowa,
and in 1843 went to Cedar county, also in this state, whence they
came in 1850 to Ingraham township, Mills county. They were practical
farmers and reared their three sons and five daughters to the work
and responsibilities of farm life, and all of them are living except
the eldest son, Joseph G. McCoy, who was killed by a runaway team in
Oregon, in his sixtieth year, and whose oldest son was killed there
by the Indians. Mr. McCoy was a prominent farmer and a leader in
local affairs and held many township offices. His widow survived him
ten years and died in 1875, aged seventy-three. They are buried at
East Liberty cemetery, Ingraham township.
Casper O. McCoy left home at the age of
nineteen years and worked out by the month and for about three years
lived in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. He was married in 1851, in Cedar county,
Iowa to Lucinda Watkins, a native of Pennsylvania, who bore him a son
and a daughter, both of whom live in California. He was married a
second time in 1856 to Miss Frances Butts, of Platte county,
Missouri, by whom he had two sons and two daughters. The daughters
are deceased. Frances McCoy died in 1875, and June 20, 1877, Mr.
McCoy married Mrs. Josephine Orr, in Council Bluffs, by Rev. T. H.
Cleland. the son, William McCoy, who lives on the McCoy homestead,
has two daughters and his only son is dead. Lee McCoy, Mr. McCoy's
second son, who also lives on the homestead, has six children
living.
In the fall of 1861 Mr. McCoy came from
Missouri to Ingraham township, Mills county, Iowa, and bought seventy
acres of land, at five dollars an acre. He was successful as a farmer
and saved money and bought other land, for eighty acres of which, now
constituting his home farm, he paid fifty dollars an acre. Mr. McCoy
is now living in comparative retirement from active life, believing
that his many years of hard work entitle him to a season of rest, and
his sons farm his land and are regarded as industrious, intelligent,
progressive citizens. Lee McCoy has won a reputation as an expert
checker player and his love for the game is well known to all who are
acquainted with him. By a former marriage to Anderson Orr, Mrs.
Josephine McCoy had a son, Eugene A. Orr, who died as the result of
cerebro-spinal meningitis, and was an invalid from the age of sixteen
years until his death fourteen years afterward. He was a good student
and a boy of bright intellect, whose brief and unfortunate life
filled all who knew him with regret at his loss.

McCOY, JAMES J.
Almost every state in the Union has sent
some of its sons to Iowa, and the characteristics of the different
sections of the country have combined here in forming a spirit of
enterprise and progress that has builded up a commonwealth of large
proportions, while the work that it has accomplished has excited the
admiration of the nation. Mr. McCoy is a native of Pennsylvania, his
birth having occurred in the Keystone state in 1854. His father,
Robert McCoy, spent his early life in the east and was there married
to Miss Phoebe Anne Jester, a native of Pennsylvania, in which state
their marriage was celebrated. Five children were born of their
marriage, namely: J. E. and W. E., who are residents of Mills county;
Emma and Sarah who are at home with their father; and James J., of
this review. The year 1856 witnessed the arrival of the family in
Iowa, and the father bought the land upon which he now resides. It
was then a wild tract on which not a furrow had been turned or an
improvement made, but today it is a fine and valuable farm,
pleasantly located about one mile east of Glenwood. There the father
is still living and is one of the highly respected and honored
pioneers of the community. He had one brother, James McCoy, who was a
gallant soldier in the Civil war. He enlisted in Pennsylvania and
participated in the battle of Gettysburg, the most hotly contested
and memorable engagement of the war.
Mr. McCoy, whose name introduces this
review, was only two years of age when brought by his father to Iowa,
and in the district schools near his home he was educated. Upon a
farm he was reared, early taking his place in the fields behind the
plow. Practical experience thus fitted him for carrying on
agricultural pursuits on his own account and today he owns, occupies
and cultivates a farm three southwest of Hillsville.
Mr. McCoy was united in marriage to Miss
Minnie Schappell, who was born in New York state, a daughter of
Andrew Schappell, who was born in Germany and from the fatherland
crossed the Atlantic to New York, and is still living, his home being
in Glenwood, Iowa. His wife, who bore the maiden name of Christina
Slomp, is now deceased. She, too, was born in Germany, her birthplace
being in the northern portion of the country. Andrew Schappell first
opened his eyes to the light of day in Worms, one of the most
historic places in the fatherland, prominent on account of the
reformation which was there inaugurated by Martin Luther, who gave to
the world its Protestant religion. Mr. Schappell had two brothers who
were soldiers in Blucher's army and were both killed at the battle of
Waterloo. Unto the marriage of Mr. and Mrs. McCoy have been born five
children: Maggie, now the wife of Lucas Reasner, a member of a very
prominent family of Mills county: Mrs. Annie Wiles, whose husband is
a representative of one of the old families of that locality; Nellie,
Rhoda and Jennie, who are intelligent and ambitious girls, in whose
education the parents take a deep interest, being determined that
good advantages in that direction shall fit them for life in later
years.

McGEE, JAMES
Those who have never been called upon to
face the necessity of making a home in a new country can scarcely
understand the trials and privations which the early pioneers
encountered in their struggles with wild nature. The history of the
subject of our sketch and a description of his present productive
farm would be incomplete without reference to his prents, William and
Jane (Harper) McGee, who were among the pioneers of Indiana. They
possessed the stalwart frames and sturdy will that made of their
children the first pioneers of a land still farther west.
James McGee was born in West Virginia, June
28, 1825, his father, William, having been born in Kentucky, in 1792
and his mother in Virginia, where their marriage took place, in 1820.
In 1830 they emigrated to Indiana, settling in the dense woods on the
Wabash river. Here Mr. McGee took up and cleared one hundred and
twenty acres of government land, laboring as only a man of stalwart
frame and perfect health could do, being ably assisted by a faithful
and devoted wife. She was noted for her capable management of her
household, not only caring for it and her family, in the wilderness,
but proving in every way a real and true helpmate for her husband,
and her descendants honor her memory. Six sons and four daughters
came to them, six of the family still living, all in Iowa, with the
exception of one son, who is in California. William McGee died in
Fountain county, Indiana, in 1850, the mother of our subject
surviving until 1891, dying in Shenandoah, Fremont county,
Iowa.
James McGee, the subject of this memoir, had
very little chance for schooling, but has proven that success does
not always depend upon education. He has accumulated property, is one
of the solid men of his neighborhood, and has gained the respect of
all by these sterling qualities which enabled him to overcome the
disadvantages of early life. When twenty-one years of age he was a
flatboatman on the Wabash river, living at home. In 1850, when
twenty-five years of age, he removed to Iowa, where he has lived ever
since. The next year after his removal to Iowa, he wished to obtain a
horse and some money that he had left in Indiana, and started on the
long tramp of six hundred miles, making it in twelve and one-half
days! Buying another horse and wagon, he returned to Iowa, where he
had built a house of logs, and had at that time fifteen dollars with
which to begin housekeeping.
Fortunately for Mr. McGee he had married a
heroic woman who cheerfully endured the privations of their life,
assisted him in every way by her advice and example, and still lives
to tell of those days. For eight years she cooked the family meals
without a stove, sometimes out of doors, and for two years after
building their cabin they had no brick chimney. The first summer a
child was born, adding to the cares of Mrs. McGee, and when the
daughter was but about two years old the twins came, making her
duties heavy indeed, as she was obliged to do all of her own work,
the nearest neighbor being two miles away. Wild animals wandered even
to the door of their cabin, but through it all she preserved the
patience and sweet disposition which have made her beloved by all
those who come within her acquaintance. The name of this admirable
woman was Lydia A. Davis, born in Susquehanna county, Pennsylvania,
April 10, 1827. She was the daughter of John and Mary (Reed) Davis,
who had moved from Kentucky in 1836 to Missouri, and thence to
Hancock county, Illinois, where the mother died in 1844. Then Mr.
Davis moved to Pottawattamie county, Iowa, at which place James McGee
first met this lady who became his wife, they being married in
Council Bluffs, in 1852. She had been bereft of her mother at the age
of seventeen years and upon her shoulders was thrown the care of twin
boys five years old and an infant. Her father later removed to
Wisconsin, where he died at the age of eighty-four years.
When Mr. and Mrs. McGee started out in life
he was often obliged to work for fifty cents a day to provide for the
necessities of his growing family; but labor brought its own reward
and a proud day it was when they became the possessors of the first
one hundred acres of land. They have now four hundred and thirty
acres of well stocked and finely cultivated land and three pairs of
horses, while for the past twenty eight years they have resided in
their comfortable residence in section 1, in Anderson
township.
The family of Mr. and Mrs. McGee was a large
one, consisting of fourteen members, twelve of whom are still living:
Mary, the wife of Charles Russell, a farmer of Hall county, Nebraska,
has six children; Luther and Lucy, twins, the former of whom is a
farmer in Monroe county, Iowa, and has five children, and the latter
died, a young mother, leaving an infant; William and Henry, twins, the
former deceased at the age of nineteen and the latter a farmer of
Monona county with seven children; Almira, the widow of Edgar Helm,
of Page county, Iowa, has three children; Jane, the widow of Julian
Parmly, living at home with her parents; Addie, the wife of Robert
Harding, has seven children; John, a farmer in Nebraska county,
Nebraska, has four children; Charles, a tenant farmer at his parental
home, has one son; Maggie, the widow of John Royal; Andrew, a farmer
in Pottawattamie county, has one daughter; Bertha, the wife of Frank
Sliter, of Woodbury county, Iowa, has two sons; and Della, the wife
of Asa Williamson, lives near Emerson, but they have no children.
There are two great-grandchildren in the family, and a pleasant sight
it must be to see this aged couple with all of their descendants
about them.
Mr. McGee is a staunch Republican, and,
remembering how he has borne his part through life, one may judge
that he has firm convictions.

McKOWN, JOHN B.
John B. McKown is one of the public
officials of Hastings, holding the position of postmaster, and his
fidelity in office is as marked as was his loyalty when, at the time
of the Civil war, he defended the stars and stripes on the
battlefields of the south. His wide acquaintance will render his
history one of particular interest to the readers of this volume.
Therefore it is with pleasure we present his record among those of
other representative men of southwestern Iowa.
Mr. McKown was born in Elizabeth, Allegheny
county, Pennsylvania in 1842. His father, James McKown, is also a
native of the Keystone state, but the paternal grandfather, James
McKown, was born in Ireland. On crossing the Atlantic to America he
made his way direct to Chester county, Pennsylvania, in the latter
part of the eighteenth century, and spent his remaining days in the
Keystone state. His wife was also a native of the Emerald Isle, where
they were married, and she, too, died in Pennsylvania. James McKown
was born on the 24th of August, 1808, and in his early life learned
the tailor's trade. He married Miss Maria Bryce, who was born in
Pennsylvania in 1797, her parents, however, being natives of
Scotland. In order to support his family Mr. McKown continued to work
at his trade, and one of his best remembered business transactions
was the making of a suit of clothes for James G. Blaine, who was then
a young man residing in Allegheny county, where he was married. At
one time he belonged to the Pennsylvania militia. His wife prepared
food for the American soldiers in the war of 1812, her people being
innkeepers in Pennsylvania at an early day.
Unto Mr. and Mrs. McKown were born the
following named: James, now deceased; Margaret, the deceased wife of
the Rev. Joseph White, a United Presbyterian minister, who also has
passed away; Mattie J., who has long been a missionary in the
educational department of the United Presbyterian church in Egypt;
Mrs. Sarah M. Wright, who is living with her husband in Mahaska
county, Iowa; and Mrs. Trapena Taggart, a widow now living in Denver,
Colorado. With their family the parents came to Iowa in 1854,
locating on a farm in Lee county, whence they subsequently removed to
Monmouth, Illinois. Later, however, they returned to the Hawkeye
state, taking up their abode in Marion county, in the spring of 1862,
there continuing until 1872, when they located in Decatur county.
After two years, however, they came to Mills county, in 1875,
settling on a farm in Indian Creek township. The father died in
Kansas in 1884, while the mother died in Emerson, Iowa, in
1877.
John B. McKown, whose name introduces this
record, was twelve years of age when the family came to this state.
He accompanied his parents on their various removals and while living
in Monmouth, Illinois, he responded to his country's call for aid,
enlisting as a member of Company C, Eighty-third Illinois Infantry,
on the 22nd of July, 1862. He went to the front under Captain L. B.
Cutter and Colonel A. C. Harding, the troops proceeding to Fort
Hineman, Kentucky, on the Tennessee river, and the first important
engagement in which he participated was at Fort Donelson.
Subsequently he was with his company in guerrilla service through
Kentucky and Tennessee, being thus engaged until the cessation of
hostilities. In that manner of warfare his regiment had frequent
conflicts with General Joe Wheeler's men and the troops under other
noted southern leaders, and the service which fell to the lot of the
Eighty-third Illinois was of a very arduous nature. At Nashville,
Tennessee, Mr. McKown was mustered out, on the 24th of June, 1865,
and on the 6th of July of that year he received an honorable
discharge.
Joining his family in Iowa, Mr. McKown has
for some time been engaged in mercantile pursuits. He was connected
with commercial interests in Emerson, being employed as a salesman in
a dry goods store at that place for twelve years. In public affairs
Mr. McKown has been prominent, for his fellow townsmen recognizing
his worth and ability, have frequently called him to office. He
served for several terms as the town recorder of Emerson, for two
years a township clerk and for a number of years was a member of the
school board. On the 1st of January, 1898, he was appointed
postmaster at Hastings and his administration of the affairs of the
office has been commendable and satisfactory. In politics he has been
a stalwart Republican, casting his first presidential vote for
Abraham Lincoln in 1864. In his social relations he is identified
with Milton A. Summers Post, G.A.R. of Malvern, and he and his wife
attend the Hastings Methodist Episcopal church.
Mr. McKown was married in 1868 to Miss
Margaret Carter, a daughter of Henry and Fannie Carter, an old and
prominent family of southwestern Iowa. Her people came to this state
from Connecticut in 1856 and were therefore pioneers. The marriage of
our subject and his wife was celebrated in Knoxville(sic), Mills
county, Iowa, and unto them have been born in following children:
Ronald K. Fannie M., now the wife of T. G. Fewson, of Pueblo,
Colorado; Arthur C., also of Pueblo; and Merle C., James H., Ila C.,
Ada G., Frank H. and Flora H., the last two being twins, are still
with their parents.
Mr. McKown is a man of genial disposition
and kindly nature, and manifests thoughtful consideration for others.
He finds his greatest happiness by his own fireside in the midst of
his family and counts no sacrifice or effort too great that will
enhance their happiness or promote the welfare of his wife and
children. In his business affairs he has been successful, his careful
management, sound judgment and untiring effort bringing to him
creditable prosperity. He indeed deserves mention among the prominent
people of Hastings and should find a place in the history of the men
of business enterprise in the great west whose force of character,
intelligence, integrity and control of circumstances have contributed
in such an eminent degree to the solid growth and progress of the
entire country., His life has been manly, his actions sincere, his
manner unaffected and his example well worthy of emulation.

McMULLIN, LOUIS
D.
A well known and highly esteemed citizen of
Indian Creek township, Mills county, Iowa, is Louis D. McMullin, the
subject of this review. He was born in 1830, in Ohio, but was reared
in that part of Virginia now known as West Virginia, having been
taken there a child of seven years. He was a son of James and Mary
(Vears) McMullin, the latter a daughter of Elisha Vears, of German
ancestry, but a native of Pennsylvania. Her birth was in Ohio and she
died in Illinois. The paternal grandfather was a native of Ireland
who immigrated to this country and became a soldier in the
Revolutionary war, dying in that service. James McMullin was born in
Ohio, but his death took place in West Virginia. The members of the
family of Mr. and Mrs. McMullin were: William; Minerva J., deceased;
Mrs. Diantha Wagoner, living in California; James, who died in
Ottumwa, Iowa; and our subject
In 1852 our subject left West Virginia with
his mother and located in Henderson county, Illinois, where he
engaged in farming and was a brick-mason and contractor from his
twenty-second year until about six years ago, putting up many of the
best brick buildings in this part of Iowa. He and his partner built
the first business house in Red Oak. He was a good workman, having
learned the trade in West Virginia, but farming seemed to be a more
secure way of existence and this business he adopted as his life work
when he came to Mills county in 1866. He had seen a year's service in
the army, having enlisted in Company G, Thirtieth Illinois Infantry,
under Colonel Shedd, early in 1864, and this regiment was ordered to
Nashville, where it was destined to be connected with some of the
severest fighting of the year. Mr. McMullin took part in the
destruction of Atlanta and all of the fighting in that vicinity,
enduring many privations and bravely doing his duty to his country.
He was mustered out in Springfield, in July, 1865, and the next year
came to his present home in the great state of Iowa.
Mr. McMullin has been very successful in his
farming and now owns one hundred and twenty acres of some of the most
productive land in Mills county. His improvements rank well with
those of his neighbors and his residence offers every comfort of life
to his interesting family.
The marriage of our subject was to Miss Mary
Catherine Davis, a daughter of James R. and Hannah (McCullough)
Davis, of Scotch and Dutch ancestry. The children of this marriage
are: Frank E., James William, Harry C., deceased, Edwin S., Mrs.
Clara E. Pratt, Mrs. Mary J. Ruby, Mrs. Euphie H. Salmons, Mrs.
Myrtle L. Silkett, Fannie A. and Mrs. Eldra Floy Young. the family
life of Mr. and Mrs. McMullin is a most pleasant one and all are
connected with the Cumberland Presbyterian church where they are much
esteemed.
In politics Mr. McMullin is a Republican,
although he does not like any departure from the old principles of
the party. In the township he has been called upon to serve as school
director for many years. His connection with the Masonic order dates
back fifty years, making him one of the oldest members in the county.
The family is one of the most highly regarded in this section, and
Mr. McMullin is justly considered a representative man in Indian
Creek township.
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