Biographical
& Genealogical History of Appanoose & Monroe Counties, Iowa
New
York, Lewis Publishing Co. 1903
James
M. Castner page 346
James
M. Castner, who is engaged in the hardware and implement business in Lovilia,
has been a representative of mercantile interests in this place for a number of
years, and is an enterprising man, who might well be termed a “captain of
industry” because of his indefatigable labor and successful control of every
work he has undertaken. Far back into
the early history of Pennsylvania can his family history be traced. In 1766 his ancestor entered from the
government the land upon which James M. Castner was born, and the old house is
still in the possession of his descendants.
Six generations of the Castners have been born upon that land, and the
town of Donora, Pennsylvania, has been built upon a portion of it.
Daniel
and Rebecca ( Miller ) Castner, the parents of our subject, were both natives
of the Keystone state, and the former, a farmer by occupation, devoted his energies
throughout his entire life to the tilling of the soil. His political support was given the
Democracy and he was ever a citizen of worth, giving his co-operation to every
measure which he believed would benefit his locality. He died in 1875, and his wife, surviving him twenty-one years,
passed away in 1896. In their family
were twelve children: Martin Van Buren,
Marie E., James M., John K., Silas W., Jessie M., Bert W., Mary J., Wilbert F.
and William L., and two that died in infancy.
Upon
the ancestral homestead in Washington county, Pennsylvania, James M. Castner
was born, February 11, 1843, and was there reared, while in the common schools
of the neighborhood he received his education.
Lessons of industry and integrity were early impressed upon his mind by
his parents, and through the periods of vacation he gained practical knowledge
of farm work by assisting his father in the fields. At the age of twenty-four he left his boyhood home and in 1868
became a resident of Bluff Creek township, Monroe county, where he followed
farming for about six years. In 1874 he
took up his abode in Lovilia, where he has since resided.
In
1875 he established a lumber and grain business, which he conducted with
success until 1894, when he sold out to the Green Bay Lumber Company, and he is
now conducting a hardware and implement business. He is well known as a factor in the business life of Lovilia and
after embarking in his new enterprise it was not long before he had secured a
liberal patronage, which is constantly growing, so that the business has
already assumed profitable proportions and the future of the enterprise seems a
bright one.
In
1866 Mr. Castner was united in marriage to Miss Helen Pollock, a native of
Westmoreland county, Pennsylvania, and to them were born three children, two
sons and a daughter, but Bert P., the eldest, is the only one now living, Mary
Josephine and John Kerr having passed away.
The wife and mother died in 1874 and in 1876 Mr. Castner was again
married, his second union being with Miss Rose Clark, a daughter of P. R.
Clark. Five children have graced this
union: Guy Kerr, Katheryn, Anna, Louis
and James Miller.
A
staunch Republican, Mr. Castner exercises his right of franchise in support of
its men and measures, and has labored effectively for its success in this
community. He has been honored with
some local offices, having served as school director, as justice of the peace
and as a member of the board of supervisors and his official labors resulted
beneficially along the lines directed.
Both he and his wife are members of the Methodist Episcopal church, and
in his fraternal relations he is connected with the Masons, the Odd Fellows and
the United Workmen, holding membership in the local lodges in Albia. Starting out in life for himself without
capital, and realizing that there is no royal road to wealth, Mr. Castner has
labored diligently and unremittingly in an effort to attain prosperity, and
today is accounted one of the substantial citizens of his adopted town, while his
social qualities are those which win friends, and wherever known
Mr.
Castner is spoken of in terms of high regard.~~~~~~~