Dallas-Clinton County IA Archives Biographies.....Melick, Stewart Pierce 1844 - ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net//copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net//ia/iafiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Joy Fisher sdgenweb@yahoo.com December 25, 2007, 12:25 am Author: Lewis Publishing Co. (1896) STEWART PIERCE MELICK, one of the leading merchants of Dallas Center, Iowa, was born in Lightstreet, Columbia county, Pennsylvania, August 5, 1844, and is a son of Jacob B. Melick, an old resident of Lyons, now North Clinton, Iowa, who was born on the 7th of October, 1820. The latter's father, Peter Melick, was born February 27, 1794, and died in August, 1867. He was a farmer of Lightstreet, Columbia county, Pennsylvania, and by his marriage to Margaret, daughter of Jacob Best, became the father of thirteen children, of whom Jacob B. was the eldest. Peter Melick was the fourth son and child of Peter M. Melick, Sr., who was born April 18, 1752, and died February 11, 1830. He married Rachel, a daughter of John F. Klingeman, and granddaughter of Jacob Klingeman, who came to this country from Germany in a very early day. Peter Melick, Sr., lived on his father's land near Espy, Pennsylvania, until 1778, when his house was destroyed by the Indians. He was the son of Johann Peter Moelich and grandson of Hans Peter Moelich, of Bendorf on the Rhine, Germany. The latter was born in that place, October 12, 1715, and probably came with his brothers to America when a mere boy in 1735. Our subject has a valuable work published by his cousin, Andrew D. Melick, entitled "Story of an Old Farm," which carries the family back to the time when one Moelich, a native of Greece, first settled in Germany. The word Moelich is of ancient Greek origin, standing for lyric verse, and is one of the most historic names in print. One of England's sweetest singers had immortalized the name in song,-"From the mead where the melick groweth." The evolution of the word down to our subject is Moelich, Malick, Mellick and Melick. Jacob B. Melick, the father of our subject, was twice married, his first union being with Mary, a daughter of Adam Hilliard, and their wedding was celebrated June 16, 1842. To them were born three children, of whom Stewart P. is the eldest. The mother died September 1, 1851. On the 1st of February, 1854, Mr. Melick married Martha Reeser, a daughter of Benjamin F. Reeser, and they became the parents of three children. The father was a medical practitioner and opened a drug store in North Clinton, which he conducted in connection with the practice of his profession until his death on the 27th of March, 1893. In the usual manner of farmer boys Mr. Melick of this sketch passed his early life, and in connection with the labors of the fields attended the district schools. He accompanied his father to Iowa in 1855, locating in North Clinton in June of that year. In 1871 he arrived in Dallas Center, where he opened a general store in connection with John M. Hoopes, which they conducted for five years, when the firm was changed to Melick & Fox. Two years later our subject bought out his partner's interest and for the next five years was alone in business, but at the end of that time sold a half interest to S. Ineson. In 1894 this connection was dissolved and now the firm is composed of Mr. Melick and one of his sons, under the style of S. P. Melick & Son. At the age of fourteen our subject had entered the office of the old Lyons Mirror, as an apprentice, and for seven years followed printing. In 1862 he enlisted in Company K, Twenty-sixth Iowa Infantry, and was discharged at Memphis while in the Fort Pickering Hospital. When he had recovered he went to Virginia in the Quartermaster's Department, in which he remained until the close of the war. On returning home he again took up the printer's trade, which he followed until his marriage. On the 18th of February, 1869, Mr. Melick wedded Augusta H. Partridge, who was born in Sycamore, De Kalb county, Illinois, April 11, 1847, and to them were born five children, one of whom died at the age of two years and three months and another died in infancy. Those living are Louis Earl, born December 27, 1871; Martha Augusta, May 5, 1876; and Charles Stewart, February 3, 1879. On the 17th of April, 1895, Louis Earl Melick married Nellie V. Townsend, who was born in Dallas county, August 6, 1873, and is a daughter of Nathan and Victoria (Darling) Townsend. Her father was born in Flint, Michigan, in 1847, and when but four years of age accompanied his father, Nathan A. Townsend, Sr., to California. The latter was of English parentage and during the '50s kept an old-time frontier hotel in Muletown, California. In early manhood the son returned to Iowa, where he engaged in agricultural pursuits, and in 1870 wedded Victoria Darling, who was born in Potter county, Pennsylvania, in 1846, and is a daughter of Luke and Mary Darling, who were of Scotch descent and about 1864 came to Iowa, where the mother died. Besides his farming interests, Mr. Townsend also carried on merchandising until 1893, when he removed to Clay county, Nebraska, where the family still resides. After the death of her mother, Mrs. Townsend lived with her brother Stephen and taught in the public schools of this section until her marriage. The father of Mrs. Stewart P. Melick, Charles P. Partridge, was born in Massachusetts, and was a son of John Partridge, who left the Bay State for Wyoming county, New York, and later went to De Kalb county, Illinois. The latter used to tell many interesting stories of the Indian massacre in the valley of Wyoming and of the witchcraft in Massachusetts. The other children of his family were Lyman, deceased, who never came West; Ashman, who is also deceased, and was for many years a resident of southern Kansas; Amos, who lives in Pike, New York; Phoebe, who is the wife of George Dennis and makes her home in Sycamore, Illinois; and Almyra, who is the wife of Hartley Huntley and makes her home in Pike county, Illinois. Charles P. Partridge married Lucy Anne Seavey, who was born in Chichester, New Hampshire, in 1817, and was a daughter of William and Lucy Anne (Drake) Seavey, who also had a son, William Seavey, Jr. The latter's son, Lafayette W. Seavey, is a scenic artist of some prominence in New York city. Mrs. Partridge was only sixteen years of age at the time of her marriage, and accompanied her husband to De Kalb county, Illinois, where they both passed away. Five children blessed their union,- Augusta Helena, Lucy Anne, Charles P., Zelotus B. and William S. Lucy Anne, who was born in Wyoming county, New York, April 5, 1834, attended a seminary in Pike, that State, and with her parents removed to De Kalb county, Illinois. At Sycamore, Illinois, she married A. A. Everett, and they later removed to Lyons, Iowa, from there to Chicago, thence to Greenwich, Huron county, Ohio, and finally to Dallas Center, Iowa. Charles P., Jr., was born in Wyoming county, New York, and from his home, in Sycamore, De Kalb county, Illinois, went to Winona, Minnesota, where he worked in the lumber districts one winter and the following spring went down the Mississippi river on a raft, and at Galveston, Texas, died of yellow fever in 1859. Zelotus B., who was born in De Kalb county, May 8, 1845, at the age of sixteen enlisted in the Thirteenth Illinois Infantry, becoming a member of Company F. At the first battle of Vicksburg he was wounded in the arm, and on his way from that place to St. Louis his feet were frozen. In a hospital in the latter city the surgeons placed him on a table and were about to amputate his arm, but he refused to submit. During his confinement there his mother was with him. He later re-enlisted in the one-hundred-days service. In 1872 he removed to Hall county, Nebraska, where he took up a homestead claim, and was baggage agent for the Union Pacific Railroad at Grand Island, Nebraska, for some time. He is now serving as County Clerk of Hall county, being elected on the Republican ticket. At Sycamore, Illinois, he wedded Hannah Maria Depew. William S., the youngest child of the Partridge family, was born in De Kalb county, in 1851. He also removed to Hall county, Nebraska, in 1872, and is now in the employ of the Union Pacific Railroad at Grand Island. In that State he married Molly Ware, and they have two children. We now return to the personal history of Mr. Melick, who is a charter member of D. C. Richmond Post, No. 230, G. A. R., of which he served as Commander in 1890. was for several years Adjutant, and the remainder of the time has been Quartermaster. He and his wife are faithful members of the Methodist Episcopal Church, and are also active workers in the Sunday-school, of which he served as superintendent for over fifteen years, and she is equally prominent in all of the ladies' societies of the church. He is a stanch Republican in political faith and cast his first vote for Abraham Lincoln at his second election. In all enterprises for the advancement of his county or State, Mr. Melick takes a leading part, and in social as well as business circles the members of the firm of Melick & Son rank high. Additional Comments: Extracted from: A MEMORIAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL RECORD OF IOWA ILLUSTRATED "A people that take no pride in the noble achievements of remote ancestors will never achieve anything worthy to be remembered with pride by remote descendants."'—MACAULAY. "Biography is by nature the must universally profitable, universally pleasant, of all things."—CARLYLE "History is only biography on a large scale"—LAMARTINE. CHICAGO: THE LEWIS PUBLISHING COMPANY 1896 File at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/ia/dallas/bios/melick179gbs.txt This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.org/iafiles/ File size: 9.9 Kb