Biographical
& Genealogical History of Appanoose & Monroe Counties, Iowa
New
York, Lewis Publishing Co. 1903
Luther
Chisman page 544
Luther
Chisman is a self-made man, whose industry and energy in his chosen life work
have made him one of the well-to-do agriculturists of his community. His birth occurred in Dearborn county,
Indiana, October 21, 1851, and he comes of an old Pennsylvania family of German
descent. His paternal grandfather, John
Chisman, was a native of the Keystone state, but became a resident of Iowa, and
both he and his wife died in Wapello county and were laid to rest in a cemetery
near their home. Their son, Edward
Chisman, was born in Indiana and spent the days of his youth upon a farm in
Dearborn county. When he had reached
man’s estate he desired a companion and helpmeet for the journey of life and
married Miss Keturah Clark, who was born in Ohio, and belonged to a prominent
family of that state of English ancestry, but was reared in Indiana.
In
1853 they left their home in Dearborn county and with their family came to
Iowa, settling in Polk township, Wapello county, near the Monroe county line,
he having here purchased a tract of government land in 1850. It was then raw prairie, on which not a
furrow had been turned or an improvement made, but with characteristic energy
he began to plow the fields and in course of time made his tract a valuable
farm property. In the family were the
following children: Amanda, the wife of
Pete Burjeson, of Blakesburg, Iowa;
Anna, the wife of H. D. Lane and died in Wapello county; Trumbull; and
Josephine, deceased. The father died
upon the homestead farm in 1861, at the age of forty-one years. He was a Democrat in his political views and
served as justice of the peace and as a member of the school board. He held membership in the Baptist church, to
which his widow also belongs. She still
resides upon the farm and on the 13th of November, 1902, she
attained her eight-first year.
Luther
Chisman spent his early boyhood days with his parents, but at the age of
fourteen years started out to earn his own living. Previous to this time he had been a student in a district school,
in which there were seventy-five students and tow teachers in a room twenty-two
by twenty-four feet. It was known as
the Liberty school, and to that institution he is indebted for all the mental
training he received inside a schoolroom.
Mr. Chisman was married on the 5th of February, 1874, to Miss
Tennie Burjeson, a native of Sweden, in which country she was educated. Her parents were Jacob and Lena Burjeson,
and the latter died during the infancy of Tennie. The father, however, came to America and for six years was a
resident of Iowa.
Mr.
Chisman’s first purchase of land comprised eighty acres in Cedar township,
Monroe county, and was bought with money acquired through his own labor at farm
work. After four years he sold this
property and removed to Kansas, where he remained for four years and then
returned to Iowa, settling on a rented farm in Ringgold county, near Kellerton. In 1888 he purchased a farm of William
Wilcox in Mantua township, Monroe county, comprising one hundred and sixty
acres of land, and has since resided on this property, which constitutes one of
the best farms in the locality because of its many excellent improvements, its
good grades of stock and highly cultivated fields. There are blue-grass pastures, verdant meadows and grain fields
which give promise of rich harvests, and the farm is well fenced and everything
is in good condition.
To
Mr. and Mrs. Chisman have been born six children: James, who is twenty-four years of age and assists in the
cultivation of the home farm; Ina, the
wife of Charles Springer, a prominent farmer of this township; Retta, who is a student in the high school
of Albia; Alta, who is eleven years of
age; Edward, who died at the age of
twenty-one years; he was a young man
loved by all for his good qualities and his loss was deeply felt throughout the
community; and Sarah, who died a the
age of two and a half years, in the state of Kansas. Mr. Chisman’s study of political questions has led him to endorse
the principles of the Democratic party, and he has frequently been a delegate
to its county conventions. He is
regarded as one of the substantial citizens of the community, being found on
the side of progress and improvement in all matters pertaining to the general
good, and in matters of business his straightforward and reliable dealing is
one of his strong characteristics and has led to his success.
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