Biographical
& Genealogical History of Appanoose & Monroe Counties, Iowa
New
York, Lewis Publishing Co. 1903
Clendennen
Boggs page 242
Clendennen
Boggs is now living a retired life in Albia.
He has passed the seventy-sixth milestone on life’s journey, and his has
been an upright and honorable career, worthy of the respect and veneration
which are shown him. He was born in
Braxton county, West Virginia, June 18, 1826, his parents L. M. and Nancy
Boggs, who were also natives of West Virginia.
The father followed farming throughout his entire life, thus providing
for his family. With his wife and
children he started for the west in the year 1837 and took up his abode in Lee
county, Iowa, nine years before the admission of the state into the Union. He secured a tract of land upon which he
carried on agricultural pursuits, and in 1843, when the district now comprised
within Monroe county was opened for settlement by the white man, he came with
his family to this portion of the state and was among the honored pioneers who
laid broad and deep the foundation for the present development and progress of
the county. He gave his political
support to the Whig party in early life and when the Republican party was
organized he joined its ranks. In the
early fifties he was called upon to mourn the loss of his wife, who died in the
faith of the Methodist church, of which she was a devout and earnest
member. Mr. Boggs long survived her,
reaching the advanced age of ninety-three years, his death occurring in
1899. Their children were
Clendennen; Henderson; Nathan;
Mary Jane, deceased; Louisa; Smith;
George M., who has also passed away;
Martha Ann; Malissa; and Martin.
Clendennen
Boggs spent the first thirteen years of his life in the state of his nativity
and then became a resident of Iowa, where he has lived continuously since, and
the history of the state from early pioneer times is familiar to him. His educational privileges were limited, but
he made the most of his opportunities and as the years have passed he has
prospered, gaining a comfortable competence as the result of this earnest and
indefatigable labor.
When
twenty-three years of age he was united in marriage to Miss Margaret Ramsey, a
daughter of John Ramsey, their wedding being celebrated in Monroe county, where
he had located about three years previous.
Previous to his marriage he had entered one hundred and twenty acres of
land from the government, for which he paid the price of one dollar and a quarter
per acre. It was as it came from the hands
of nature, covered with the native prairie grasses, not a furrow having been
turned or an improvement made thereon, but he at once began to break the
prairie and in course of time the fields were planted and good harvest
followed. Through his energetic efforts
and the assistance of his estimable wife he prospered as the years passed by
and throughout his active business career continued to engage in farming, but
he eventually put aside business cares, and disposing of his land removed to
Albia. He there purchased property and
has since made his home in this place.
To
Mr. and Mrs. Boggs have been born the following children: Henry Clay;
William E., deceased; and Newton
E. For almost fifty-seven years the
subject of this review has resided in Monroe county and for more than a half
century he and his wife have traveled life’s journey together. While there have been no exciting chapters
in his career, his life history proves how valuable are enterprise and industry
in the active affairs of life, for it has been along these lines that Mr. Boggs
has acquired the comfortable competence that now enable him to live retired in
the enjoyment of the fruits of his former toil.
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