The principal blacksmith shop
and wagon manufactory in Clarksville is owned and operated by T. E.
Kephart. He engaged in business in 1875 in connection with his
brother, J. E. Kephart, who then owned the shop. T. E. Kephart
subsequently purchased his brother’s interest, and has since
conducted the entire business; and the “Kephart wagon” now takes the
lead in Butler county.
.
Mr. Kephart is a native of Venango county, Pennsylvania, born
November 14, 1848. His father, H. G. Kephart, now resides in
Clarksville, and although well along in years, he still follows his
trade – that of blacksmith. His mother, Margaret (Berdine) Kephart,
died in 1866. When F. E. was yet an infant the family emigrated to
Iowa and settled in Dubuque county. J. E. resided here until 1866;
he then went to Guttenberg, Clayton county, where he served a three
years apprenticeship to the blacksmith and wagon-maker trades, after
which he was engaged in business in Deleware county, until he came
to Clarksville. Mr. Kephart is an industrious and successful
business man, who is highly respected by all who know him. In 1869
he married Miss Catherine Horsch, of Cassville, Wisconsin.
.
Source: History of Butler and Bremer Counties, Iowa
Union Publishing Co., Springfield, IL, 1883
Pages: 536-537
Additional information
courtesy Carl Ingwalson, Iowa 21st Infantry Biographer-5 Mar 2018
Biography of T E Kephart's
brother, Caleb with information on their father Henry Kephart,
Clarksville resident
CALEB E.
KEPHART
The son of Henry G. and Margaret (Burdign) Kephart, Caleb was born
in Pennsylvania on March 4, 1844. From there the family moved to
Cottage Hill, Iowa, where Henry had a small blacksmith shop. Caleb
lived at home, worked with his father and contributed his earnings
to the family.
At Cottage Hill on August 22, 1862, eighteen-year-old Caleb was
enrolled by Manchester’s Joseph Watson in what would be Company H of
the 21st Iowa Volunteer Infantry, a company that had been ordered
into quarters at Dubuque’s Camp Franklin the previous week. Formerly
known as Camp Union, the camp was located "on a sandy plateau on the
bank of the Mississippi" "at the upper end of the bottom land
adjoining Lake Peosta" just south of Eagle Point. Its ten buildings
were each twenty by sixty feet and "arranged to accommodate one
hundred men each" On the 23rd, the company was mustered in with a
total of ninety-three men and, on September 9th, ten companies were
mustered as a regiment. Caleb was described as being five feet eight
inches tall with blue eyes, dark hair and a fair complexion. As a
private, he received $13.00 as one-month’s pay and, like other
volunteers, a $25.00 advance on the $100.00 enlistment bonus and a
$2.00 premium.
On a rainy morning, September 16, 1862, the regiment left camp at
10:00 a.m. and marched south through town while families, friends
and local residents watched. Women sent cakes and cheese and others
tossed apples. From the levee at the foot of Jones Street the
soldiers boarded an overly crowded Henry Clay and two open barges
tied alongside, "packing ourselves like sardines in a box." On the
second day of their trip, due to low water at Montrose, they had to
debark, travel by rail to Keokuk and board the Hawkeye State that
took them to St. Louis. From there they traveled by rail to Rolla
and that’s where they were on October 14th when Caleb’s mother died.
She is buried in Cottage Hill Cemetery where her stone says she was:
36 Yrs. 1 Mo. & 2 days
when taken home above.
----
She was a kind and affectionate wife
and a friend to all.
From Rolla men able for duty walked south to Salem, Houston,
Hartville and then, after a wagon train was attacked on November
24th, back to Houston. Many from the regiment participated in a one
day battle at Hartville on January 11, 1863, but there’s no
indication that Caleb was with them. After the battle, they returned
to Houston and rejoined their comrades who had not been in the
battle. Those able for duty walked south to West Plains and then
northeast to Thomasville, Ironton, Iron Mountain and St. Genevieve.
They were then transported down the Mississippi to Milliken’s Bend
where General Grant was organizing a large army to capture
Vicksburg.
After crossing the river from Disharoon’s Plantation to Bruinsburg
on April 30th, Caleb participated in the May 1st Battle of Port
Gibson, was present during the May 16th Battle of Champion’s Hill
when the regiment was held in reserve by General McClernand,
participated in a May 17th assault at the Big Black River,
participated in a May 22nd assault at Vicksburg, and participated in
the successful siege that ended on July 4th. During the campaign the
regiment had lost thirty-four men killed in action and thirty-one
others whose wounds later proved fatal. Many others had non-fatal
wounds.
Caleb continued with the regiment when it moved to Louisiana in
August, 1863, during six months it spent along the Gulf coast of
Texas, and on June 30, 1864, when they were stationed at Terrebonne
Station in Louisiana. On July 8th they traveled by rail to Algiers
where they camped not far from the river. Matthew King, one of
Caleb’s comrades in Company H, kept a diary and, on July 13th noted
that the day was “cloudy but pleasant” and Caleb Kephart “is very
sick in the hospital.” On the 19th it was raining and the regiment
had “new guns and white gloves,” but “Henry Paul, Caleb Kephart and
Alfred Goldsmith are sick in hospital.” Henry and Alfred recovered,
but Caleb did not. On July 28, 1864, Caleb died of “chronic
dysentery” in New Orleans’ University Hospital. His personal effects
were inventoried: “one Uniform coat, one Blouse, 2 pr. Trowsers, 2
pr. Drawers, 2 Flannel Shirts, 2 pr. Socks.” He is buried in
Chalmette National Cemetery.
Caleb’s father, Henry Kephart, owned forty acres in Dubuque County
and another twenty acres of “poor brush land,” but was severely
handicapped after becoming ill with a “hip joint disease when quite
young.” His right leg was four inches shorter and half the size of
his left leg and he wore “a high iron heel to make him walk level.”
In 1879 he applied for a dependent father’s pension with supportive
affidavits from friends and neighbors.
After Caleb’s death, with the help of his other children, Henry had
worked the best he could in his blacksmith shop but in 1868 felt
compelled to sell the forty acres. The brush land was “sold for
taxes” and Henry left Cottage Hill. Since then he had been “living
different places with my sons occasionally & going around from place
to place where I could get light jobs doing black smith work to
support myself until 1877 when I was unable to work” and moved in
with Taylor (one of his sons) in Clarksville.
David Edmiston testified to Henry’s marriage to Margaret at Spruce
Creek, Pennsylvania “Sept 2d 1840" and the birth of Caleb “at Mill
Creek Furnace on or about March 4 1844.” Henry said his wife “died
at Cottage Hill Iowa, on the 14th day of October, A.D. 1862" and he
had not remarried. James Montgomery said he had his blacksmithing
done by Henry and Charles Platt had a wagon shop next to Henry’s.
The two men signed a joint affidavit saying that, when Caleb died,
“there were seven children all under sixteen years of age dependent
upon the aid of said son with the labor which said father could do
and he could not labor one half of a mans work by reason of a
lameness in the right leg.”
Caleb said it was six, not seven, siblings who were living when
Caleb died and that Caleb, “in part, if not wholly,” had supported
them and his father. Thomas Greenley and John Ridler (who had served
with Caleb) had been “near neighbors” of Henry and said his forty
acres had been worth about $800 but had a $450 mortgage and, after
it was sold, “his family got all scattered around as he could not
keep them together being unable to do anything for them.”
The Pension Office sent an inquiry to the Adjutant General’s Office
which confirmed Caleb’s military service while Dr. E. H. Dudley in
Shell Rock examined Henry and agreed that he was “wholly
unfit to perform manual labor.” On April 22, 1882, Henry’s claim was
submitted by a Pension Examiner and on May 10th it was approved by a
Legal Reviewer. A certificate was mailed entitling Henry to $8.00
monthly retroactive to July 29, 1864, the day after Caleb’s death.
The amount had been increased to $12.00 monthly by the time Henry
died on April 20, 1904. He is buried in Lynwood Cemetery,
Clarksville.
Carl Ingwalson
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Resting places of
those mentioned in this biography:
Taylor Essington
Kephart-Lynwood Cemetery, Clarksville
John E. Kephart-Lynwood
Cemetery, Clarksville
Henry Green Kephart-Lynwood
Cemetery, Clarksville
Anna Margaret (Burdign) Kephart-Cottage
Hill Cemetery, Dubuque County
Page Created and online 5 Mar 2018
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