James M. Dalzell
Atorney-at-Law

Mr. Dalzell practices law and cultivates a family. A troop of little girls with one little boy are often at his heels on the street. Patriotism begins at home and the hearthstone is its cradle. On my arrival at Caldwell that sentiment I found at fever heat. It was just on the eve of Decoration Day and the streets were full of children assembling to prepare for its celebration, and among them was those of the Private. Mr. Dalzell is of Scotch-Irish parentage, tall and wiry in person, with profuse yellowish locks, which once in the wartime, when in Washington, caused him to retreat from a band of music, who were after him for a blast, mistaking him for General Custer.

James M. Dalzell was born in Allegheny City, Pa., September 3, 1838. When he was nine years of age his father removed to Ohio. Under great difficulties he succeeded in obtaining an education, and was a junior at Washington College, Pa., at the outbreak of the war.

He served two years as a private in the One Hundred and Sixteenth O.V.I. After the close of thewar he studied law, filled a clerkship at Washington, and in 1868 settled permanently in Caldwell. During his life Mr. Dalzell has been a prolific and able writer for the press; his championship of the cause of the private soldier of the revellion has been spritited, fearless and influential. Over the signature of Private Dalzell his writings have appeared in almost every newspaper int he land. In 1875, and again in 1877, he was elected to the Ohio Legislature, but withdrew from political life in 1882. He is a very able stump speaker, an ardent Republican, and associate and friend of such men as Sumner Garfield, Hayes, Sherman, and thier contmporaries.

Mr. Dalzell was the originator and author of the popular Soldiers' Union, now held annually in all parts of the country. Mr. Dalzell takes great pride in his work in behalf of John Gray, the last soldier of the Revolution. In 1888 Robert Clarke & Co., of Cincinnati, prublished a volume entitle "Private Dalzell." It contains "My Autobiography." "My War Sketches," etc., and "John Gray." It is an interesting and valuable publication. We quote a restrospect of his political life. "In an evil hour, in the summer of 1885, I foolishely accepted a nomination to the Legislature, was elected, and there ended my prosperity. After the election, in October, my name was in all the papers, congratulations poured in on me from every quarter, and I was invited to take the stump in Pennsylvania, which I did, at a great waste of time and money. I thought nothing of it then. It was only when, years after, I looked into an empty flour barrel and hungry children's faces and felt in my empty pockets, that I fully apprehended my folly. Four years I now spent in the maelstrom of politics, whirled and tossed about at the caprice of fortune, without any power to control it. I look back on it with pain...It is a grand game, and none but grand men need try to play it. Let men of moderate abilities, like myself keep out of it if they would escape the chagrin and mortification of faulure, accentuated with the pangs of poverty."

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Submitted by: Tina Hursh
"Historical Collections of Ohio, Vol. 2" by Henry Howe copyrighted 1908 Page 355


William H. Enochs was born near Middleburg, March 29, 1842, and is the only native of Noble county who attained the rank of General in the late war. He enlisted as a private in april, 1861; saw much hard service and distinguished himself for bravery and gallantry. At twenty-two he commanded a brigade, and at twenty-three he was commissioned Brigadier-General. Ex-President Hayes says of him: "His courage, promptness and energy was extraordinary. His diligence was great and his ability and skill in managing and taking care of his regiment were rarely equalled." Gen. Enochs is now a prominent lawyer of Ironton, Ohio.

Submitted by: Tina Hursh
"Historical Collections of Ohio, Vol. 2" by Henry Howe copyrighted 1908 Page 356


Freeman C. Thompson was born in Washington County, Pa., February 25, 1846. His family removed to Noble county, Ohio, in 1854. At sixteen years of age he enlisted in the 116th Ohio Volunteer Infantry, and in the assault on Fort Gregg, April 2, 1865, he performed the gallant action for which he received a medal of honor by vote of Congress. The County History says: "In this engagement (which General Grant in his Memoirs says 'was the most desperate that was seen in the East'), through a perfect tornado of grape and canister, he and his comrade reached the last ditch. How to scale the parapet was a question requiring only a moment for solution. Using each other as ladders they commenced the ascent. Almost at the top one was shot and fell back into the ditch. Thompson was struck twice with a musket and fell into the ditch with several ribs broken, but in shor time was again on the top of the parapet fighting with muskets loaded and handed him by his comrades below. Soon the adventage was taken possession of, the whole army swept in the fort was ours." In 1865 Mr. Thompson was elected sheriff of Noble county and re-elected at the expiration of his term.

Submitted by: Tina Hursh
"Historical Collections of Ohio, Vol. 2" by Henry Howe copyrighted 1908 Page 356


James Madison Tuttle was born near Summerfield, Noble county, September 24, 1823. His father removed to Indiana when James was ten years old. James enlisted in the Union army at the outbreak of the war and at the battle of Fort Donelson he gallantly led his regiment into the enemy's works, it being the first to enter. The tender of this post of honor was first made to several other regiments and declined and Gen. Smith then said to him: "Colonel, will you take those works?" "Suppoprt me promply," was the response, "and in twenty minutes I will go in." The Second Iowa "went in" with Col. Tuttle at its head and planted the first Union flag inside Donelson. Col. Tuttle was slightly wounded in this assault, but was able to stay with his command. In June, 1862, he was commissioned Brigadier-General for gallant service in the field.

After the war Gen. Tuttle settled in Des Moines, Iowa, and has been engaged in mining and manufacturing interests. He has been commander of the G.A.R. for the department of Iowa and twice a member of the Iowa Legislature.

Submitted by: Tina Hursh
"Historical Collections of Ohio, Vol. 2" by Henry Howe copyrighted 1908 Page 356


John Gray, the Last Soldier of the American Revolution

John Gray, the last surviving soldier of the American Revolution, was born at Mount Vernon, Virginia, January 6, 1764, and died at Hiramsburg, Ohio, March 29, 1868, aged 104 years.

His father fell at White Plains, and he, then only about sixteen years of age, promptly volunteered, took up the musket that had fallen from his father's hands and carried it until the war was over. He was in a skirmish at Williamsburg and was one of the one hundred and fifty men on that dangerous but successful expedition of Mayor Ramsey. He was also at York town at the final surrender, which event ovvurred in his eighteenth year. He was mustered out at Richmond, Virginia, at the close of the war and returned to field labor near Mount Vernon, his first day's work after his muster out being performed for General Washington at Mount Vernon.

Mr. Gray married twice in Virginia and once in Ohio. He survived his three wives and all his children, except one daughter, who has since died over eighty years of age, and with whom he resided in Noble county, Ohio, at the time of his death.

In 1795 Mr. Gray left Mount Vernon and crossing the mountains settle at Grave creek. Here he remained until Ohio was admitted to the Union, when he removed to what is now Noble county. Mr. Gray was not illiterate; he learned to read and write before entering the Revolutionary army. In disposition he was quiet, kindly and generous; a good Christian, having joined the Methodist church at twenty-five years of age, and was for seventy-eight years a regular attendant.

His means of support was earned by farm labor. When in his old age, poor and infirm, Congress granted him a pension of $500 per annum. The bill providing this was introduced in the House in 1866, by Hon. John A. Bingham. This tardy act of justice to the old hero was the result of efforts in his behalf by Hon. J.M. Dalzell, whose kindly interest and generous efforts to make comfortabel and peaceful the last years of Mr. Gray are highly honorable to him.

Mr. Dalzell has published a full and complete account of John Gray's carrerr and it is to this work that we are chiefly indebted for the sketch here given.

On the occasion of Mr. Dalzell's last interview with John Gray, he asked if he were not growing fatter than when he last saw him. "Oh, no," laughingly replied Mr. Gray, "we old men don't fatten much on hog and hominy and the poor tobacco we get now-a-days."

Mr. Gray had used tobacco about a hundred years and knew something of its virtues as a solace, for later in the interview, speaking of deprivations in the past, he said: "I sometimes have had nothing else but a dog," and musing a moment he added, "a plug of tobacco, of course; for without a dog or tobacco I should feel lost."

This simple, inoffensive, kind-hearted old hero died of old age, in his one-story, hewed-log house, near Hiramsburg, where he had resided the last forty years or more of his life. His funeral services were held in a grove near his home, with an audience of more than a thousand people present and presided over by several clergymen, the principal speaker being Capt. Hoagland, of the 9th Ohio Volunteer Cavalry, a minister of the Protestant Methodist Church.

He lies buried some two hundred and fifty yards north of the house in which he lived and died, in a family graveyard containing about thirty of his relatives and family connections. Near his remains lie those ot two of his relatives, Samuel Halley and Gillespie David; the first fought under General Harrison at Fort Miegs during the war of 1812, the other died in the war of the Rebellion. Thus the heroes of three wars and of the same family lie side by side.

John Gray's grave is marked by a plain stone some three feet high, on which is inscribed:

John Gray,
died
March 29, 1868,
aged
104 years, 2 months, 23 days
The last of Washington's
companions.
The hoary head is a crown of glory.

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Submitted by: Tina Hursh
"Historical Collections of Ohio, Vol. 2" by Henry Howe copyrighted 1908 Page 356


Basil Morgareidge was born in Olive Township in 1835. He followed farming, and in the latter years of his life was in the mercantile business at Caldwell, and afterwards at Dudley, being two years in each place. He died in 1883. Mr. Morgareidge was a member of Sharon Lodge, Free and Accepted Masons, and of the Universalist church. He married Asenath Blake, in 1859, who is still living in Dudley, and owns the store property. Three children are living - Edgar, Ollie and Mary. Edgar was married to Mary J. Hutchins, in 1882, and lives on a part of the Hutchins property.

History of Noble County, Ohio Published by L.H. Watkins & Co. of Chicago 1887
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Joseph Parrish, one of the eleven children of Edward Parrish, who located in Sharon Township, in 1819, was born in Belmont County in that year, and came to Morgan (now Noble) County with his parents when but three months old. In 1842 he was married to Nancy Boyd, daughter of one of the early settlers. By this union he had two children, one of whom is living - Wiley Parrish, who served in the late war in Company D, Seventh Ohio Volunteers. Mrs. Parrish died in 1867, and in 1870 he married Mary R. Lowe, of Sharon Township. To them were born two children, one of whom is living - Stella. His second wife having died, in 1886 Mr. Parrish married Kate Smoot, also of Sharon Township. Mr. Parris is a prominent farmer. The family belong to the Methodist church. He was reared on the farm of his father, received a common-school education, and has devoted his life to farming, and is one of the reputable citizens and farmers of the township.

History of Noble County, Ohio Published by L.H. Watkins & Co. of Chicago 1887
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Elwin T. Gouchenour was born in Olive Township in 1847, and is a farmer, living upon the homestead where his father settled. In 1871 he married Nancy J. Elliott, of this county, by whom he has had two children - Jesse and Minnie M. The former died at the age of four years. Mr. Gouchenour is a member of the Methodist church.

History of Noble County, Ohio Published by L.H. Watkins & Co. of Chicago 1887
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Nathan J. Ramsey was born in Pennsylvania in 1825. In 1836 he came to Harrison County, Ohio, and in 1848 to Olive Township. In the following year he married Margaret Steen; two children - Mary A. (deceased) and David. The latter married Hannah Francis and resides in Olive Township. The first Mrs. Ramsey died in 1863, and in 1864 Mr. Ramsey married Ellen Gore, who died in 1878. In the following year he married Hannah J. Hutchins. The family are members of the Disciples' church. Mr. Ramsey has served several years as township trustee.

History of Noble County, Ohio Published by L.H. Watkins & Co. of Chicago 1887
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Martin D. Poling was born in Guernsey County in 1823. In 1847 he married Martha McKee, a member of one of the old Noble County families. They have five children - Ezra, Mary, Abbie (Davis), David and Ira. Mr. Poling is engaged in farming.

History of Noble County, Ohio Published by L.H. Watkins & Co. of Chicago 1887
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Eston W. Daniel was born in Loudon County, Va., January 5, 1809. He came to Belmont County, Ohio, at the age of seven years, thence removed to Brookfield Township, now in Noble County, in 1837, and began the work of clearing and improving a farm. He remained in Brookfield seventeen years. In 1833 he married Elizabeth Edwards, of Belmont County, who died in 1882. Of their five children, three are still living. Serene, his daughter, is the wife of Andrew C. McKee.

History of Noble County, Ohio Published by L.H. Watkins & Co. of Chicago 1887
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William Ross was born in Westmoreland County in 1835, and in 1849 came to Ohio with his parents, Clement and Jane Ross, who settled in Sharon Township. William lived in that township twenty years, and in Jackson Township eleven years, coming to his present farm in Olive Township in 1880. Mr. Ross has followed farming, and at present is devoting much attention to horticulture, making a specialty of small fruits. He was one of the first in Noble County to introduce strawberries and raspberries, and has been successful in their culture. In 1856 he married Nancy Ann Bell, of Morgan County. They have had eleven children, ten of whom are living. Mr. Ross is a member of the Presbyterian church. In politics he is a Republican. He served as county commissioner in 1875 - 8, and was instrumental in furthering the adoption of an improved system of roads in Noble County.

History of Noble County, Ohio Published by L.H. Watkins & Co. of Chicago 1887
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John and Susan Haga came from Allegheny County, Pa., and settled in Sharon Township in 1820. Mrs. Haga died in 1855, Mr. Haga in 1873, at the age of seventy-four. Their son Paul married Caroline Cooper, whose parents, Solomon and Mary Cooper, came from Hampshire County, W. Va., in 1834. Mr. Cooper settled at Sarahsville, where he followed tanning. May 1, 1845, the tannery was burned and Mr. Cooper died Mary 24, from over-exertion at the fire. His widow is still living. H.J. Haga, son of Paul Haga, is a resident of this township.

History of Noble County, Ohio Published by L.H. Watkins & Co. of Chicago 1887
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Henry R. Seaman, the son of Milton Seaman, once a wealthy and prominent merchant of McConnelsville, was born in Malta, Ohio, November 1, 1829. He went to California in 1852. In 1855 he returned to McConnelsville and there married Miss Mary A. Porter, by whom he had three sons and two daughters. After being in the mercantile business in McConnelsville several years, in 1867 he removed to Sharon, where he followed the same business. In 1871 he removed to Caldwell, where he died September 4, 1882.

History of Noble County, Ohio Published by L.H. Watkins & Co. of Chicago 1887
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Aaron Haines was born in Jackson Township in 1827; his parents were early settlers in that locality. In 1849 he married Hannah, daughter of Rev. Benjamin Blake. The latter is said to have been the first white child born at Marietta. They have four children. Mr. Haines is a member of the Masons, Odd Fellows and Grand Army of the Republic. He enlisted in 1861, in Company F, Sixty-third Ohio Volunteer Infantry; served one year and was discharged on account of partial blindness.

History of Noble County, Ohio Published by L.H. Watkins & Co. of Chicago 1887
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John W. Green was born in Woodsfield, December 11, 1846. His father, William R. Green, was a native of Maine and a seafaring man; he came to Monroe County, Ohio, when twenty-four years old; died in hospital during the late war. John W. Green enlisted in December, 1862, in Company G, Seventy-seventh Ohio Volunteer Infantry, and was discharged in December, 1865. He was in engagements at Little Rock, Mark's Mills, Jenkin's Ferry, Spanish Fort, Blakely and Mobile; was an orderly on special and dangerous duty. He is a member of the Grand Army of the Republic and a Republican. Mr. Green was married in 1880 to Sarah J. Lamp, of Middleburg. Children: Carrie M., Isaac M., Chauncy E. and Ada F. He is a farmer and a carpenter.

History of Noble County, Ohio Published by L.H. Watkins & Co. of Chicago 1887
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William Tilton, one of the few pioneers, still living, was born in Maine in 1790. In 1815 he removed to Olive Township, where he entered 160 acres of land. He married Zephorah, daughter of Judge Sherebiah Clark. Their children were Lovina, Sherebiah C., Asenath, Albert, Joseph C., Benjamin B. and William. Mr. Tilton is a Republican and a strict Baptist. He now lives with his son, Albert, near Dexter City.

History of Noble County, Ohio Published by L.H. Watkins & Co. of Chicago 1887
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Ephraim Bates and his sons were among the first settlers of Noble County. He was born in New Jersey May 24, 1744. He served in the Revolutionary war, and was one of the first settlers west of the Alleghany Mountains in Fayette County, Pa. He died in Sarahsville January 2, 1834. His wife, Susannah, lived to an advanced age. Their children were Isaac, who lived many years near Sarahsville, but died in Indiana; Polly, who married John Vorhies. amd lived in Noble County; William, who settled in Guernsey County, and thence went west; Anna, who married William Dilley, and lived in Cleveland, Ohio; Timothy, one of the pioneer settlers of Seneca Township; Ephraim, who also lived in Seneca Township; Daniel and Ezekiel, who lived in Center Township.

Ephraim Bates, Sr., had one of the earliest orchards in this part of the country, and some of the trees planted by him are yet standing. He built the first mill in the township - a "corn-cracker" of a rude sort, but a great convinence to the settlers nevertheless. The mill was in operation in 1814. Ezekiel Bates, son of Ephraim, was the founder of Sarahsville.

John and Amos Bates, sons of Ephraim, were drafted into the service, in the war against Great Britain, soon after their arrival.

Before Bates' mill was erected the people of the township depended mailing for their flour and meal upon two large horse mills, owned respectively by Elisha Fogle and Thomas Barry, and situated only a short distance apart, in the southwestern part of the township.

Isaac Bates erected a mill upon his farm, which was so arranged that it could be operated by horse-power when there was a scarcity of water. After the early mills had all fallen into ruin or disuse, a steam mill was erected at Sarahsville by a company of citizens at a cost of $4,000. The company sold out to Frederick Secrest and the mill was burned. Mr. Secrest then erected a grist-mill and sawmill, which he still owns.

Jacob Bates was born in what was then Guernsey County, in 1810. In 1815 his father, Isaac, removed to the farm now owned by William McWilliams, where he was the first settler. He died in the township in 1883. He was a very reputable man and reared a family of eight children. His wife, whose maiden name was Jane Davidson, was a native of West Virginia. Her parents were among the pioneers; four of the fmaily reside in the township.

History of Noble County, Ohio Published by L.H. Watkins & Co. of Chicago 1887
Center



Shortly after the Indian war Daniel Devolld and family emigrated from Washington County, Pa., to Belmont County, Ohio. In 1814 the family, consisting of wife and six children - John, Isabella, Nancy, Betsey, Richard and Rachael, came to waht is now Noble County, and settled in Center Township. Here he purchased from government 160 acres of land for which he paid $2 per acre, that being the price of government land at that time. On this farm the elder Devolld died at the extreme old age of ninety-two. Levi Devolld was born in York Township, Belmont County, Ohio, in 1804, and came to Noble County with his parents. At the time of his father's emigration he states that the nearest neighbor in the north was Mr. Ephraim Bates, who came about the year 1812 and settled where the fairgrounds now are in Sarahsville. Mr. Devolld further states that in 1814 there was only one road in the township, called at that time (1814) the Federal Road; all points north or south from this road had to be cut through. Marietta and Zanesville were the nearest places from which supplies could be obtained. In 1819 Mr. Devolld says that he packed flour to Marietta on a horse for which he obtained $1.50 per hundred. In 1828 he married Miss Elizabeth, daughter of Peter Smith, who settled in the township about 1814.

History of Noble County, Ohio Published by L.H. Watkins & Co. of Chicago 1887
Center



Levi Devolld is probably the oldest resident of the township, having resided here continuously since 1814. He has been one of the pushing, energetic citizens, and has prospered accordingly. He has always been a farmer, and for a time was also engaged in buying and selling live stock, carrying on the tanning business, etc.

When the Devollds located here, their nearest neighbor on the west was James Lowe, about where Olive now is; on the east, James Archer, at East Union; on the northwest Benjamin Thorla, at Belle Valley, and other pioneers of Duck Creek Valley; and on the south, Elisha Harris. According to the personal recollection of Mr. Levi Devolld, in the fall of 1814 all that portion of Guernsey County which now forms the townships of Noble, Olive, Sharon and Brookfield, voted together in one election precinct. Daniel Devolld brought the kettles which were used in Thorla and McKee's salt works, which were established the year that he came. The Devolld were fond of hunting and were successful woodsmen. Levi Devolld, soon after becoming of age, made a trip through the wilderness to the lake, find few whites and many Indians in that region.

A tannery was started by Levi Devolld, in the southwestern part of the township about 1846, and was in operation for about eight years. In connection with it Mr. Devolld manufactured boots, shoes, harnesses, etc. Some rascals stole about $500 worth of stock, and caused him to abandon the business.

History of Noble County, Ohio Published by L.H. Watkins & Co. of Chicago 1887
Center



The McGarrys were among the most prominent early families. The father, John McGarry, was an Irishman, who moved to Ohio from the vicinity of Philedelphia. His sons were Samuel, David, Reed and John. Samuel read law, became probate judge and was a prominent man in the early history of the county. David died on the old homestead.

History of Noble County, Ohio Published by L.H. Watkins & Co. of Chicago 1887
Center



David McGarry, one of the best known citizens of Center Township, was born October 19, 1819, within the present limits of Center Township. He passed his early life amid the scenes of pioneers days, clearing land and farming. His educational advantages were very limited, yet through self-cultivation he became well-informed. In 1843 he married Catherine Richey. Seven children were born of this union - John C., Thomas R., Andrew, Jane, George M., Margaret and Frank. All are living except Jane, who died in infancy. Mr. McGarry was one of the foremost men in bringing about the organization of Noble County, and spent much time and labor in effecting that result. He was an active Democrat until the formation of the Republican party, then joined that organization and remained a firm supporter of tis principles. In 1847 he was elected treasurer of Union Township, an office which he held nine years. In 1871 he was nominated to represent Noble County in the legislature. B.F. Spriggs, Democrat, was his opponent. The result of the contest was a tie vote. In March, 1872, a special election was held and Mr. Spriggs was elected. In 1880 Mr. McGarry was appointed census enumerator for Center Township. He died March 7, 1881. George M. McGarry is a prominent farmer of Center Township.

History of Noble County, Ohio Published by L.H. Watkins & Co. of Chicago 1887
Center



Jonas Ball, from Alleghany County, Md., settled in 1818 west of Sarahsville on the farm adjoining that on which his son, James Ball, now livies. Jonas was a soldier in the War of 1812. James Ball, an ex-county commissioner and a prominent citizen, has lived all his life in the township, and has a very vivid recollection of the pioneer scenes among which he was reared. He recalls the time when the county was so full of wolves that sheep had to be penned up securely every night, or some of the flock was almost sure to be missing in the morning. In the neighborhood where Mr. Ball lives were the following early settlers: James Noble, James Dye and Levi Lyons.

History of Noble County, Ohio Published by L.H. Watkins & Co. of Chicago 1887
Center



Matthew Ball entered 160 acres near Sarahsville, and settled upon the tract in 1818. He died a few years later. He was a man of means, having been successfully engaged in the tanning and milling business in Maryland before he came to Ohio. His son Jonas died here. Two other sons, Daniel and John, also settled here. The former died in Iowa and the latter in Illinois.

History of Noble County, Ohio Published by L.H. Watkins & Co. of Chicago 1887
Center



Deb Murray