Biographical
& Genealogical History of Appanoose & Monroe Counties, Iowa
New
York, Lewis Publishing Co. 1903
S.
M. King, M.D. page 517
Dr.
S. M. King was born in Portage county, Ohio, September 27, 1836, on a farm, and
when two years old his parents moved to Illinois. His parents were Joel E. and Emeline ( Barnes ) King, both
natives of Massachusetts. The father’s
parents were Robert and Bridget ( Morgan ) King, natives of Massachusetts, and
great-grandfather Robert King was a native of Ireland and died in Berkshire
county, Massachusetts, in 1802, aged sixty-two years. His wife was also a native of Ireland, and he married in Ireland
and they had eleven children. He was a
practicing physician. His son, Dr.
Robert King, was also a practicing physician and participated in the war of
1812, as a captain of the Massachusetts militia. He removed from Massachusetts to Portage county, Ohio, in 1826,
and lived and died there. He had twelve
children, of whom was Joel Elisha King, our subject’s father, born in 1813 and
died in 1890 in Fairfield, Iowa. His
wife is living in Mount Pleasant, Iowa; she was born December 24, 1813.
They
had eight children, six now living. He,
too, was a physician and in 1861 enlisted in Company E., Twentieth Illinois
Volunteer Infantry, and was detailed to the hospital service. In 1862 he was discharged on account of
physical disability. He moved to
Fairfield, Iowa, in 1865 and practiced there up to his death. He was a Republican and a Methodist. When he went to Illinois from Ohio it was to
preach, but he gave up the ministry for medicine.
Sylvester
Morgan King was the eldest of the children and he was reared in Illinois. On April 19, 1861, he enlisted in Company E,
Twentieth Illinois Volunteer Infantry; as a private, and was at Fredericksburg,
Fort Donelson and Shiloh, being severely wounded at the last battle. On October 12, 1862, he was discharged and
August 15, 1864, re-enlisted from Akron, Ohio, in Company I, Sixth Ohio
Volunteer Cavalry, and served in all the engagements, including Hatcher’s Run,
Five Forks, Dinwiddie, Sailor’s Creek, Farmville, and on to Appomattox under
Sheridan.
He
was discharged May 30, 1865, at the close of the war, and then came to
Iowa. He soon went to Cleveland, Ohio,
and there attended the Cleveland Homeopathic College, in 1866, and then came to
Iowa and located at Eddyville, where he remained till 1870, when he came to
Albia. He has been in active practice
ever since. In 1878 he graduated from
the Hahnermann Hospital College at Chicago.
He is a member of the Iowa Homeopathic Medical Society and the American
Institute of Homeopathy. He is also a
member of the Grand Army of the Republic, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, and
is a thirty-second degree Mason, of the Scottish Rite, is a Knight of Pythias,
a Modern Woodman, and belongs to the Ancient Order of United Workman. He was married in 1866 to Louisa M. Chaffee.
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