Biographical
& Genealogical History of Appanoose & Monroe Counties, Iowa
New
York, Lewis Publishing Co. 1903
John
E. Carhartt page 278
Far
back into the early history of this country can the ancestry of the Carhartt
family be traced. The first of the name
in America was Thomas Carhartt, who crossed the Atlantic to serve as secretary
to Governor Dugan, and in our subject’s home is a complete genealogical record,
giving the lines of descent from Thomas Carhartt down to the present. The parents of our subject were James S. and
Mary ( Elder ) Carhartt, the former a son of Seth Carhartt and the latter a
daughter of John Elder. They resided
for some time in Coshocton county, Ohio, and both were natives of that state,
but in 1850 they started westward and established their home in Monroe county,
where the father engaged in farming. He
spent his last days in the home of our subject, where he died aged seventy-six
years. The mother afterward went to
Union county, Iowa, where she died at the age of eight-two years, but John
Carhartt brought her remains back to this county, and she was buried by the
side of her husband. In the family were
six children, but John E. and one sister are the only ones now surviving.
John
E. Carhartt was born in Coshocton county, Ohio, September 13, 1840, and was
reared upon the home farm, spending the first ten years of his life in the
state of his nativity, and then accompanying his parents on their removal to
Iowa, with the interests of which state he has since been identified. His education was begun in a log
schoolhouse, and he conned his lessons while sitting upon a bench made of a
slab laid on wooden pins driven into the wall.
Later, however, he enjoyed better educational privileges and for a time
was a student in Albia. Reading upon
the current topics of interest has made him a well informed man, and he keeps
well versed on general subject, political and otherwise. Through his youth he assisted in the work of
the home farm, but during the early part of the Civil war he enlisted in
Company E, Sixth Iowa Infantry, under Captain Sanders. He was with his regiment in a number of
battles and skirmishes, and though he often went upon long marches or took part
in battles when suffering from ill health, he reported for duty every day and
loyally stood by the old flag until it was planted victoriously in the capital
of the southern Confederacy. After the
close of the war he was honorably discharged at Louisville, Kentucky, and was
mustered out at Davenport. There was no
braver man in the army, and with a creditable military record he returned to
his home.
Mr.
Carhartt at once went to his father’s home, near where he now resides, and in
the spring of 1866 purchased his present farm in Troy township. He further completed his arrangements for
having a home of his own when in 1868
he married Miss Alice A. Boggs, a native of Monroe county. Four children have been born to them, of
whom three are yet living; Mary L., who
married S. H. Latham and has four sons;
James S., who is married and has two sons and a daughter; and John W., at home, assisting his father
in the cultivation of the farm. Since
his marriage Mr. Carhartt has resided continuously upon his present farm and
has made it a fine country home, its neat and thrifty appearance being
indicative of the care and supervision of a progressive owner.
Never
an active politician in the sense of office seeking, Mr. Carhartt has always
had firm faith in the principles of the party which he endorsed by casting his
first presidential vote for Abraham Lincoln, in 1864, while in the army. He has labored for the success of the party
and is recognized as one of the stalwart Republicans of the locality. He is a charter member of J.R. Castle Post
No. 313, G.A.R., of Avery, the oldest post in this section of the state; for two years he served as its commander,
after which he became quartermaster and has since held that office. He also belongs to the Presbyterian church,
and his Christian faith and belief have been manifest in his conduct toward his
fellowmen, who know him to be a man of upright purpose and of intrinsic worth
of character.
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