Biographical
& Genealogical History of Appanoose & Monroe Counties, Iowa
New
York, Lewis Publishing Co. 1903
Hugh
Q. Adams page 573
Nature
has been lavish in her gifts to America.
Each section of the country has been provided with at least one source of
income. New England has its splendid
lumber regions, Pennsylvania its coal fields, the south produces cotton, the
west has its rich mineral deposits and the broad Mississippi valley is the
agricultural district of the country, and it is upon the agriculturist more
than any other class of citizens that the prosperity and upbuilding of the
country depends. Iowa is one of the
best cereal-producing portions of the entire land, while its rich pasture lands
afford ample opportunity to the stock-raiser.
Mr. Adams is among those who are devoting their time and energies to
farming, his valuable homestead being located in Bluff Creek township. He was born in Beaver county, Pennsylvania,
on the 14th of April, 1844, and is a son of Alexander M. and Harriet
( Quinn ) Adams, natives of Allegheny county, Pennsylvania, where the former
died at the age of seventy-six years and the latter when she had reached the
age of forty years. This worthy couple
became the parents of fourteen children, eight of whom are still living.
From his early youth Hugh Q. Adams has been identified with agricultural pursuits. When he was eighteen years of age the Civil war broke out and he offered his services in defense of the Union cause, entering Company H, One Hundred and Fortieth Pennsylvania Infantry, under the command of Captain Orman. His military career covered a period of three years, on the expiration of which he received an honorable discharge at Washington, D. C., for the war had ended and the country no longer needed his services. Returning to his old home in the Keystone state, he there resumed the more quiet duties of the farm and was thus engaged until about twenty years ago, when, in 1882, he came to Iowa. His valuable farm of two hundred acres is located six miles north of Albia, in Bluff Creek township, and all of the many and substantial improvements thereon stand as monuments to his thrift and excellent business ability. He is engaged in diversified farming and stock-raising, and in both lines of endeavor is meeting with a high and well merited degree of success.
The
marriage of Mr. Adams was celebrated on the 8th of October, 1868,
when Miss Mary Martha Clever became his wife.
She, too, was born in the old Keystone state, in Allegheny county, and
is a daughter of Martin and Elizabeth ( DeGroft ) Clever. Her paternal grandparents were Martin and
Mary Magdalene ( Minick ) Clever, while on the maternal side she is a
granddaughter of Adam and Eve DeGroft.
Martin Clever, the grandfather, survived until about eighty-three years
of age, and his wife reached the age of seventy-five years, both dying in
Pennsylvania. Martin Clever, the father
of Mrs. Adams, was born near Allegheny county, that state, six miles northwest
of Pittsburg. In the spring of 1869 he
came to Iowa, first locating north of Albia, but subsequently removed to that
city, and there he still resides. His
wife, a native of Westmoreland county, Pennsylvania, died in Allegheny county,
that state, at the age of thirty-seven years.
Ten children were born of this union, and with one exception all are
still living, are married and have families of their own.
Mrs.
Adams remained on the old home farm until her marriage, and she, too, has
become the mother of ten children, one of whom, LeRoy, died at the age of four
years and three months. Those living
are as follows: Martin H., who is
married and has two children, and the family reside in Chicago, Illinois; Alexander George, whose wife died in Albia,
leaving two children, and they are being reared by our subject and his
wife; Elmira F., who is married and has
two children; Robert L., who also has
two children and is engaged in business in Albia; Mary M., who is married and had two children, one of whom is now
deceased; Glen L., who is engaged in
operating the home place; Nannie C.,
who is married and has one child; Ethel
G., who is married and has one child;
and Avis A., at home. The
children reflect much credit upon the parents, and the family is one of
prominence in the locality in which they reside.
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