Biographical
& Genealogical History of Appanoose & Monroe Counties, Iowa
New
York, Lewis Publishing Co. 1903
David
W. Kenworthy page 66
One
of the retired farmers of Monroe county who has been an inhabitant of this
state for over sixty-five years, thus being able to take a front seat in the
old settlers’ meetings, is David W. Kenworthy.
He is the son of Jehu and Amaretta ( Stockton ) Kenworthy. Jehu Kenworthy was born in North Carolina in
1801 and there grew up to manhood. Long
before Iowa was admitted to statehood he came to Cedar county and in 1854
removed to Monroe county and bought land near the present site of the village
of Tyrone; and on this farm of two hundred and forty acres he lived until his
death. In politics he was a member of
that famous organization known as the Know Nothing party and was also a Whig
and a Republican; he and his wife were
members of the Christian church. His
wife was a native of Ohio and bore him eleven children: Rebecca, deceased; Alzina, deceased; Clark,
deceased; Mary is living; Ira, deceased; William, deceased; David
W. is living; Jesse, deceased; Charles Otis is living; George, deceased, and Winfield Scott is
living.
David
W. Kenworthy is a native son of Iowa, having been born in Cedar county, October
20, 1838; the first few years of his
life were spent here and in 1847 he went to Montgomery county, Indiana, where
he remained for nine years. He then
returned to Monroe county, but soon after emigrated to Oregon, which was at
that time one of the growing and newly developed sections of the country. While there the Civil war burst upon the
country and he was one of the first to enlist, enrolling himself on December
10, 1861, at Phoenix, in Company D, First Oregon Cavalry; they spent the following winter at Camp
Baker and in the spring crossed the state to Oregon City, where they were
engaged in numerous skirmishes with the Indians; after three years’ service he
was mustered out at Vancouver, Dec. 10, 1864.
The year following his army service he drove a team for the government
and in May, 1865, he returned to Monroe county and engaged in farming, which
occupation he has continued up to the present time.
On
February 2, 1866, Mr. Kenworthy was married to Miss Elizabeth McCreary, a
native of Ohio, who came to Iowa at an early day. Mr. and Mrs. Kenworthy became the parents of six children, four
sons and two daughters: Arthur,
Amaretta, Nona, William, Harry and Mark; all were born in this county and are
living at the present time. Mr.
Kenworthy has always found that the Republican party expressed his political
belief, and in the various affairs of public concern has shown himself a true
and representative citizen of the county.
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