Davis County IA Archives Biographies.....Wallace, John R. 1847 - ************************************************ 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 12, 2007, 11:18 pm Author: Lewis Publishing Co. (1896) JOHN R. WALLACE.-Holding distinctive prestige as one of the influential and representative business men of Bloomfield and prominently identified with the agricultural interests of Davis county, Mr. Wallace is clearly entitled to consideration in this volume; and not alone for the reasons above enumerated, for his parents were among the honored pioneers of the county and were intimately concerned in the labors which constituted the initial stages of development in this section of the favored commonwealth of Iowa. Our subject, who is cashier of the State Bank of Bloomfield, is a native of the State of Tennessee, having been born in Marshall county, on the 13th of February, 1847, the son of William and Elizabeth M. (Rawson) Wallace, both of whom were natives of Tennessee, where they were reared to maturity and where their marriage was consummated. The mother was born in Marshall county, that State, October 23, 1829, and her marriage to Mr. Wallace occurred when she was sixteen years of age. She was the daughter of Dr. Joseph Rawson, a distinguished physician of Tennessee. In February, 1849, William Wallace removed with his family to Iowa, settling in Prairie township, Davis county, where he purchased a farm and devoted his attention to its cultivation and to the raising of live stock, remaining there until the spring of 1858, when he removed to the village of Troy, this county, and there continued his residence until 1862, when he again resumed farming operations, locating on a tract of land four miles west of Troy. Mr. Wallace served with the militia in defense of the southern Iowa border during the late war of the Rebellion, assisting in the work of repulsing the armed bands of guerillas and bushwhackers who made frequent raids into the State for the sake of plunder, and in which connection they committed many atrocities and murdered many defenseless and peaceable citizens. These desperadoes were a menace to the State, and the annals of the period are replete with records of their nefarious and inhuman deeds. The father of our subject was one of their unfortunate victims, having been murdered by these dastardly outlaws, November 7, 1864, while at work on his farm. He was a man of strong mentality, utmost integrity and pleasing personality, having been an influential factor in the community and having retained the high esteem and friendship of all with whom he came in contact. It may well be imagined that the disaster of his untimely death, at the hands of craven assassins, was a most grievous loss and a most poignant sorrow to his family, but the devoted mother bravely assumed the double burden placed upon her shoulders, keeping her family together and continuing to reside on the farm until 1870, when she removed to Bloomfield. In 1888 she went to Colorado and there remained with her children until she was called upon to obey death's inexorable summons, her demise occurring July 25, 1895, near Grand Junction, that State. She was a devoted member of the Presbyterian Church, in which faith she passed away, and in the merging of her noble and beautiful life into the infinite there was a consistency which could not but serve to palliate the grief of those who remain to revere her memory. Her mortal remains were interred beside those of her husband in the old cemetery in Prairie township, this county, where also repose the remains of two sons and two daughters who had preceded her into eternal rest. She was the mother of five sons and four daughters, of whom the survivors are: Thomas A., Camilla and W. S. Wallace, residing at Grand Junction, Colorado; and John R. and Mrs. Mary M. Moore, of Bloomfield, Iowa. John R. Wallace, the immediate subject of this review, remained with his mother on the old homestead until he had attained the age of seventeen years, receiving his educational discipline in the district schools and in the academy at Troy. Upon leaving school he secured a clerical position in a general store, conducted by N. W. Cook, in Bloomfield, and later held similar incumbencies in turn with Thomas Ewing and the firm of Cooper & Wray, the latter being dealers in clothing and men's furnishing goods. He had by this time developed a keen discrimination and a valuable knowledge of business methods, and he entered upon a business career individually by engaging as a real-estate, loan and insurance agent, his operations in this line being so ably conducted as to gain him marked precedence and a representative supporting patronage. He continued to be thus concerned until 1887, when he associated himself with others in the organization of the State Bank of Bloomfield, of which he was simultaneously made cashier, and has since served in that exacting capacity, having proved himself a discerning and conservative financier and one particularly eligible for the office he holds. The institution is recognized as one of the solid monetary concerns of the county, and the representative support accorded shows the confidence in which the interested principals are held by the people of the community. A general banking business is conducted and careful attention is paid to the wants of patrons and to the extending of accommodations within the province of the institution. Mr. Wallace is the owner of an excellent farm of 587 acres, located in Davis county, and the same is devoted to general agricultural operations and to the raising of live stock, while the permanent improvements are of substantial and attractive character. Our subject maintains a personal supervision of the work of his fine farmstead, and is in close touch with the interests of the agricultural community. He is also identified with other important financial institutions and industrial concerns outside of Bloomfield, in which connection it may be stated that he is a stockholder and director of the State Bank of Albia and the State Bank of Keosauqua, this State. Politically Mr. Wallace does not render a supine allegiance to any party organization, but maintains an independent attitude, using his franchise in support of men and measures rather than in upholding a prescribed political code. In his fraternal relations he is prominently identified with the Masonic order, being a member of Franklin Lodge, No. 14, A. F. & A. M., of Bloomfield Chapter, R. A. M., and of Malta Commandery, Knights Templar, at Ottumwa. He is also a Noble of the Mystic Shrine, and is a member of the lodge and encampment of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, being held in the highest esteem in both business and social circles. The marriage of Mr. Wallace was solemnized January 8, 1873, when he was united to Miss Mary J. Walton, a daughter of Ira D. Walton, of Bloomfield, Iowa, and they are the parents of two sons: Fred W. and Samuel T. 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/davis/bios/wallace150gbs.txt This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.org/iafiles/ File size: 7.8 Kb