Biographical
& Genealogical History of Appanoose & Monroe Counties, Iowa
New
York, Lewis Publishing Co. 1903
John
R. Clark page 578
The paternal ancestors of Mr. Clark were New Englanders, and his father, Wareham G. Clark, was born and reared in the state of Connecticut, and engaged in mercantile pursuits in New York city for several years prior to coming west in 1840. On August 23, 1843, at Troy, Van Buren county, Iowa, he married Jane L. Rankin, a native of Ohio, and of Scotch-Irish parentage. This worthy couple were among the very first to come to the newly opened territory of Iowa, taking up their abode in Monroe, or, as it was then called, Kishkekosh county, at a place afterward known as Clarks Point, three miles northwest of Albia, where young Clark had made claim on May 1, 1843. He was one of the enterprising farmers of the county, and remained here until his death, June 16, 1890, in his seventy-eighth year.
He
was the representative of Monroe and Appanoose counties in the second
constitutional convention, held in Iowa City in May, 1846, and in other ways
was prominently connected with the history of the growth and development of
Monroe county. His wife died in 1898,
in her seventy-third year, having become the mother of twelve children, one daughter
and eleven sons, all of whom are now living;
the oldest is fifty-eight years of age and the youngest thirty-six, and
ten of them are residents of Monroe county, one of Nebraska and one of Idaho.
One
of the twelve is John R. Clark, who was born at Clarks Point, Monroe county,
January 3, 1855, and has been a continuous resident of this county ever since,
with the exception of two years spent in Nebraska, form 1878 to 1880. In the same year as his birth he parents
sold the original place with the intention of moving to Texas, but hey were
deterred form this course by the sickness of John R., which was thus a fateful
event and probably changed the course of the lives of the whole family. The parents then bought the place which has
ever since been known as the old homestead, situated four and one-half miles
southwest of Albia, and where the children al grew up and received such
educational advantages as were obtainable in the district schools.
Mr.
Clark has always been an observant man, and has thus supplemented the knowledge
which he obtained in his youth so as to be prepared for a successful business
career. And the fact that he was reared
on a farm, with all its wholesome environments, and that he has been taught the
habits of economy and industry and has been strictly temperate and moral in his
life, have all aided him in attaining an influential place in the world. He engaged in farming, threshing and
sawmilling for some time, and later, with his older brother, W. Grant Clark,
opened an agricultural implement store in Albia under the name of Clark
Brothers. This is one of the leading
firms in the county. The proprietors
have dealt extensively in real estate and now own nearly one thousand acres of
land in the county, and besides dealing in implements carry a stock of flour,
feed, etc., and are proprietors of Clark Brothers and Company, undertakers and
dealers in furniture, this establishment being the leading business of that
kind in the county.
Mr.
Clark has always been interested in political matters and has mainly voted with
the Democratic party since he attained his majority. In November, 1892, he was elected county auditor and served two
years, but was defeated in the race for re-election by the Republican landslide
in 1894. In 1896 and 1900 he was one of
the delegates from the sixth district of Iowa to the national Populists’
conventions. In 1896 he became the
owner of the Monroe County News, the only Democratic paper in the county, and
it is largely due to his management that the paper has gained such a foothold
in Monroe county and has become one of the leading Democratic organs of
southern Iowa. Mr. Clark is a member of
the Masonic order, and in religious matters assumes liberal views.
On
March 2, 1883, Mr. Clark was married at Creston, Iowa, to Miss Lilla E. Boggs,
who was born and reared in Monroe county, the oldest child of Percy and Jemima
Boggs, who also were among the very earliest settlers of Monroe county and are
still living at Albia. They are both of
Virginia birth. Her grandfather, Josiah
C. Boggs, built the first house in Troy township, and possibly in the county,
for it was constructed as soon as possible after the first day of May,
1843. Mr. Boggs was prominent in the
early history of the county and died at the age of eighty-three years, having
reared a large family.
The
children born to Mr. and Mrs. Clark are:
Lura R., born April 23, 1884; M.
Grace, September 23, 1885; Wareham
Grant, March 9, 1887; Lilla E. Beth,
June 18, 1890; and Jessie R., April 27,
1894. the two oldest are graduates of
the Albia high school, and Grace completed a course at the C.C.C. College of
Des Moines in stenography and typewriting.
The family reside in a modest home in the north part of Albia, and here
Mr. Clark devoted much of his time to fruit culture when not occupied with his
business.
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