Biographical
& Genealogical History of Appanoose & Monroe Counties, Iowa
New
York, Lewis Publishing Co. 1903
Joseph
Marine page 598
The
subject of this sketch is one of those quiet, unpretentious men whose name are
not seen in the papers nor on the ballots of political parties, who pursue “the
even tenor of their way,” and whose industry, in the mass, is the prime factor
in making the wheels go round. Mr.
Marine owns a good sized piece of land in the matchless farming state of Iowa,
and this he has worked industriously for many years and still works in person,
though now in the seventy-first year of his age.
Though
unobtrusive in manners and inclined to attend strictly to his own business,
while letting that of others alone, Joseph Marine is recognized by his intimate
friends as a man of sterling worth and blameless life. The family came originally from New Jersey
in the persons of Moses and Ellen ( Monroe ) Marine, who settled first in Ohio
and came west to Iowa in 1854. The
father was a farmer and followed that occupation for a livelihood until his
death in 1870, two years after his wife had departed from the scenes of
earth. They had the unusually large
number of fifteen children, of whom only Moses, Joseph, Alexander, Sarah and
Maria are now alive, those dead being Robert, Samuel, John, Nichols, William,
Washington, Ilof, Mary, Margaret and Louise.
Joseph
Marine, who was the seventh of this numerous family, was born August 25, 1832,
in Belmont county, Ohio, and spent his boyhood at home. In 1850, when about eighteen years old, he
caught the western fever and crossed the Mississippi into the great state of
Iowa, but in two years felt such a longing for a sight of the old Buckeye home
that he could not resist the pressure to return to Ohio. However, he did not long remain in his
native state, but, again turning his face northwest, came back to Iowa, and
from that time until now has been one of its most steadfast citizens.
In
1855 Mr. Marine was married to Lucy, daughter of William and Mary Foster, to
which union an only son, Alexander Lincoln, was born. Mr. Marine owns a farm of two hundred and forty-nine acres, which
he work himself, despite his more than three-score and ten years of age. He and his wife are both devoted Christians
and regular attendants of the Methodist Episcopal church, of which they have
long been members.
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