Biographical
& Genealogical History of Appanoose & Monroe Counties, Iowa
New
York, Lewis Publishing Co. 1903
Lawson
B. Carlton page 122
Among
the brave men who devoted the opening years of their manhood to the defense of
our country from the internal foes who sought her dismemberment was Lawson B.
Carlton, who for half a century has been among the honored residents of Monroe
county, Iowa, his home being in Mantua township. A native of Ohio, he was born in Geauga county on the 15th
of September, 1841, and is a son of Marion Carlton, who was born in Connecticut
and belonged to an old family of that state, which was of English descent. Going to Ohio, the father there married
Philosha Bradley, a native of that state and a daughter of Selah Bradley, who
was also born in Connecticut.
In
1850 Marion Carlton brought his family to Iowa, making the journey by the lakes
to Chicago, by railroad to Burlington, and on by stage to his destination in
Wapello county. By occupation he was a
farmer, but when the country became involved in civil war he laid aside the
plow and entered the service as a member of the Thirty-third Iowa
Infantry. He never lived to return
home, but died at Milliken’s Bend, Mississippi, at the age of forty-six
years. In politics he was a Republican. His wife died at the age of fifty-eight
years. They were the parents of five
children, namely: Lawson B., of this
review; Angie M.; Adolph, who was a soldier of the Third Iowa
Cavalry during the Civil war, and is now a resident of Oregon; Mrs. Cora Stanley, who also makes her home
in that state; and Harley H., of
Sheridan county Kansas. In connection
with farming the father also worked at the carpenter’s and wheelwright’s trades
and was a good mechanic.
Lawson
B. Carlton was a lad of nine years when he accompanied his parents on their
removal to the Hawkeye state, where he grew to manhood. During his youth he learned the blacksmith’s
trade and became a good workman, continuing to follow that occupation until
after the inauguration of the Civil war, when, feeling that his country needed
his aid, he enlisted in 1862 in Company H, First Iowa Cavalry, under Captain
Westcott and Colonel Anderson. He
remained in the service until hostilities ceased and at different times was
under the command of Generals Custer, Steele and Davison. His services being no longer needed, he was
honorably discharged at Austin , Texas, and returned home with a war record of
which he may be justly proud.
Before
entering the army Mr. Carlton was married, in February, 1861, to Miss Eliza A.
Miller, whose brother, James M. Miller, was also in the service, being a member
of Company K, Third Iowa Cavalry. He
was killed in battle on the 16th of April, 1865, at the age of
twenty-four years, thus laying down his life on the altar of his country. Mrs. Carlton was born in Portage county,
Ohio, and is a daughter of A. F. Miller, also a native of that state, who came
to Iowa in 1846, being the first to settle on Miller’s Ridge, in Mantua township,
Monroe county. Here he died at the ripe
old age of eighty-six years, and his wife, who bore the maiden name of Clarissa
Morgan and was a native of Ohio, died at the age of seventy-two. Both were faithful members of the Methodist
Episcopal church, and he was a Republican in politics and by occupation a
farmer. Their children were Eliza A.,
wife of our subject; Mrs. Harriet
Riddle; Albert; D. R.;
Mrs. Florence Ames, of Mantua township, and Washburn, a resident of
Decatur county, Kansas.
The
following named children have been born to our subject and his wife: D. C., who is married and is now engaged in
the operation of his fine farm of one hundred and twenty acres; Mrs. Ada Hinton, a resident of Cass county,
Iowa; and A. F., who married Elsie Macy
and lives with his father on the home farm, has three children—Leslie, Forest
and Verne. Mr. Carlton and his son own
a well improved and highly cultivated farm of one hundred and fifty-three
acres, on which is a good house and substantial outbuildings. Besides the cultivated fields there are
pasture, meadow and woodlands, and the farm is a very productive and valuable
one. The family hold membership in the
Methodist Episcopal church, and Mr. Carlton is identified with J. R. Castle
Post No. 313, G.A.R., of Avery, Iowa.
Both he and his sons vote the Republican ticket and take quite an active
and commendable interest in public affairs.
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