Biographical
& Genealogical History of Appanoose & Monroe Counties, Iowa
New
York, Lewis Publishing Co. 1903
David
J. Martin page 176
One of the ablest and most prosperous men of Monroe county to-day is D.J. Martin, who resides two and three-quarters miles northwest of Melrose, on the place known as the Walnut Grove farm, where he is extensively engaged in breeding thoroughbred shorthorn cattle and Poland China hogs. He started in life without any particular advantages which would of themselves boost him to the top round of the ladder of success, but he has by the wise use of the talents that were vouchsafed to him and by the exercise of the determination and energy that were in him risen to a place where he may be called one of the leaders in the business and social life of his community.
M.D.
Martin, his father, was born in Ohio and came to Illinois when quite a young
man, and from there went to Iowa, where he located in Wayne county, and a few
years later located in Wayne township, Monroe county. He wife, Elizabeth S. Prather, was born in Bartholomew county,
Indiana, in 1828, and there passed her early life. She came to Iowa in 1848 and located in Van Buren county, but in
the same year her father, D.J. Prather, settled in Monroe county, and she remained
at home there until her marriage.
The
marriage occurred in 1853, and one child was born, the subject of this
sketch. Mr. Martin marred a Miss
Sackett for his second wife, and they became the parents of three children. Mr. Martin died in South Dakota in 1891 and
was buried near Rochester, Minnesota, where his second wife now lives. The mother of our subject lived on the home
farm until 1884, when she went to Eugene, Oregon, where her death occurred
January 30, 1901.
D.J.
Martin is a native son of Monroe county, his birth having occurred August 8,
1854. He received his preliminary
education in the town of Melrose, and at the age of seventeen entered Howes
Academy at Mount Pleasant, where he was a student for two years, and he then
spent one year at the Iowa Wesleyan University. For the next seven years he devoted himself to teaching school in
the winter and to farming in the summer seasons.
On
March 5, 1885, he was married to Miss Sarah Brandon, who was born in Monroe
county, and whose father we shall mention further on in this article. She attended the common schools of her
native county until her seventeenth year, and afterward received a complete
business training at the Bloomfield and Shenandoah business colleges. After returning from school she opened the
first set of books in her father’s newly established bank at Melrose, and for
four years preceding her marriage acted as cashier in this bank, she having
been among the first, or perhaps the first lady bank cashier in the state of
Iowa. Her sister then accepted the
position and served in that capacity until her marriage, at which time Mr. and
Mrs. Martin took charge of the bank, Mr. Martin being cashier and his wife
assistant.
This
arrangement was continued for about seven years, and during the last four years
Mr. Martin was the owner of a one-third interest in the bank. After retiring from the bank he returned to
his farm, where he now lives. He has
about four hundred acres of excellent land, and his place shows the evidences
of good management and thrift, which are largely responsible for his
success. He also owns land in Oregon,
while his wife has eighty acres in this county and one hundred and sixty acres
in Texas.
In
political belief Mr. Martin adheres to the Republican party and is chairman of
the central committee of Wayne township.
In religious affairs both he and his wife have been reared in the faith
of the Methodist church and are active workers in the cause. They are well known and highly respected in
all circles. Mr. and Mrs. Martin became
the parents of six children, five sons
and one daughter: Randall, who died in
infancy; Elbert C., Sterling B., Thomas, David B., Mildred L.; all are natives
of Monroe county.
Thomas
Brandon, the father of Mrs. Martin, is a pioneer settler of Monroe county. He was born in Crouchtown, Tennessee, August
27, 1826, and remained there until sixteen years of age. He came to Iowa in 1845 and took up a
homestead claim in Franklin township, Monroe county. He has since bought a great deal of land in this county and at
one time owned about fourteen hundred acres, a large part of which he has since
given to his children.
He
was the founder of the first bank in Melrose, and perhaps has done more to
develop the material resources of the county than any other one man. Forty-one years ago he nearly suffered the
loss of his eyesight, and his daughter, Mrs. Martin, assisted him in organizing
his bank at Melrose, and to her he owes much to his success. He is now seventy-six years old and spends
his winters on a large plantation in Texas and San Diego, California. Mr. Brandon is well known over the entire
county and is everywhere shown the honor due to an old age following a life of
useful and successful effort.
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