HISTORY OF CLAY COUNTY 81 and he was a member of the Lutheran church and a life-long Democrat. John F. Miller has spent his entire life on the farm which his father cleared and cultivated, and he and his sister, Johanna M., live together and carry on its work. He erected the present residence in 1887, a commo- dious and attractive home, and he farms one hundred and twenty acres. Both he and his brothers follow in the political footsteps of their father and vote with the Democracy, and the family are members of the Chris- tian church at Bee Ridge, in which Mr. Miller is serving as a deacon. JOHN COOPRIDER.—An honored representative of those brave pioneers that settled in Indiana in territorial days, the late John Cooprider was a true type of the energetic, hardy and enterprising men who actively assisted in the development of this fertile and productive region, being identified with its agricultural, manufacturing and financial interests. He lived first in Harrison county, but a few years after the admission of Indiana to statehood settled in Clay county. In those days the wild beasts of the forest had not fled before the advancing steps of civilization, and the dusky savage still inhabited the vast wilderness. A son of Peter Cooprider, he was born October 10, 1791, in Indiana county, Pennsyl- vania, of Holland-Dutch ancestry. Peter Cooprider was born on the ocean while his parents were en route from Holland to the United States. He subsequently lived in Mary- land, and there married his first wife, Anna Hochstottler. They after- wards removed to Indiana county, Pennsylvania, where, on September 25, 1807, his wife died, leaving five children: John, Folly, Peter, Jacob and Peggy. After her death he migrated to Kentucky, settling at Elizabeth- town, where he married for his second wife Mrs. Elizabeth Fleshman, nee Yeoger. In later years he came with this wife to Indiana, and here, with their children, they spent their remaining days; his death occurring at Middlebury in 1847, at the age of four score and four years, and hers about three years later. Warm-hearted and kind, he made friends with the Indians, one of whom used to visit and hunt with him every fall. After the death of his mother; John Cooprider, the eldest son of Peter and Anna Cooprider and the special subject of this sketch, went to live with the Fleshman family, and with them went to Elizabethtown, Ken- tucky, where he remained a number of months. In 1809, an ambitious young man, full of push and energy, he came to the territory of Indiana and settled near Corydon, Harrison county, where he lived until the breaking out of the war of 1812. Enlisting then in the service of his country, he fought under General Harrison and was present at the cap- ture of Fort Harrison. Coming to what is now Clay county in 1821, Mr. Cooprider located at Neal’s Mills, or Kossuth Bluff, as it was then called, Clay county was at that time a thick forest, owned almost entirely by the government, there being very few whites in this vicinity, but plenty of deer, bears, wolves, panthers and other wild animals. In the fall of that year he went back to Harrison county to spend the winter, but the following spring returned to this county. Here, instead of settling on the land that he had taken up on his first visit to the place, at Kossuth Bluff, Mr. Cooprider entered another tract at what is now Middlebury, and there established a home. He was a skilled mechanic, a blacksmith by trade, and for many years manufactured not only edged tools of all kinds but did general blacksmithing and made bells, which were in great demand, as in those days stock ran at large and bells were attached to the horses,