Johnson County KS Archives Biographies.....Clark, Emanuel 1830 - ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/ks/ksfiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Joy Fisher http://www.genrecords.net/emailregistry/vols/00001.html#0000031 March 19, 2009, 5:38 am Author: Ed Blair (1915) Capt. Emanuel Clark, a Civil war veteran who has been prominently identified with the development of Johnson county for fifty years, is a native of Pennsylvania. He was born on the banks of the Juniata river in Huntington county, March 13, 1830, and is a son of Thomas and Mary E. (Knoblach) Clark, the former a native of Huntington county, Pennsylvania, and the latter of Bedford county, and both descendants of old Maryland stock, the former oii English and the latter of German descent. George Knoblach, grandfather of Mr. Clark, was a soldier in the Revolutionary war. The Clark family removed from Pennsylvania to Union county, Ohio, in 1840. The father followed farming there until 1866 when he came to Kansas, locating near Gardner and was successfully engaged in farming for a number of years. He died in 1894, aged ninety years and six months. The mother passed away in 1886, aged eighty-nine. They were the parents of four children: Emmanuel, the subject of this sketch, and three sisters, who are now deceased. Emanuel Clark received his education in the public schools and at Mechanicsburg Academy, Mechanicsburg, Ohio, where he was graduated in the class of 1852. He followed teaching for eight years in Logan, Champaign and Union counties, Ohio, and when the Civil war broke out he enlisted at Raymond, Ohio, July 20, 1861, and became a sergeant in Company F, Thirty-first regiment, Ohio infantry. His first service was a detail assignment as brigade sergeant, sometimes called master mechanic. He had charge of all the transportation, including wagon making and all marching equipment, horse-shoeing, etc. He had charge of from 100 to 400 workmen in his department. At one time he had 1,700 wagons. He remained in the position of master mechanic one year, during which time he was in Kentucky and Tennessee. Promotion did not come fast enough in that line and he returned to his regiment and was appointed orderly sergeant. He participated in the battles of Pittsburgh Landing, Murfreesboro, Tullahoma, Chickamauga, where he received a bayonet wound in his left side, Missionary Ridge, Kingston, Buzzard's Roost and Resaca. He was also severely wounded at Resaca, receiving a gunshot wound through the heavy muscle of the left arm, also a gunshot wound in the left knee and was also struck by fragments from an exploding shell on the right knee, also shot in the left side over the heart, the ball following a downward course for about fourteen inches and was cut out in the field hospital. After having recovered from his wounds sufficiently he was detailed on a recruiting expedition for a time. He was promoted to sergeant major of the regiment on the field of Chickamauga for valorous conduct in action and on December 19, 1863, was commissioned second lieutenant and ten days later was promoted to first lieutenant. As second lieutenant he served in Company D, and as first liutenant in Company K, Thirty-first regiment, Ohio infantry. After fully recovering from his wounds received at Resaca, he rejoined his regiment August 17, 1864, on the Chattahoochee river, near Atlanta, and was appointed regimental quartermaster, ranking as first lieutenant. After a month he resigned this position to become adjutant of the regiment and served in that capacity until January 1, 1865, when he was commissioned captain of Company A, Thirty-first regiment, Ohio infantry. His regiment then left Atlanta and marched north and participated in the battle of Ringgold, N. C. Captain Clark then became a member of General Hunter's staff as topographical engineer and also adjutant general, serving in that capacity on the long march to Washington, after Lee's surrender. After the grand review at Washington he was examined and passed, the examination being the same as that required at West Point. He was offered an appointment as captain in the Forty-second regiment, United States infantry, regular army, but refused to accept it, as his mother requested him, to abandon military life. He then returned to his Ohio home and resumed teaching in the same school which he had so abruptly left to join the colors four years previously. He first came to Kansas, however, and bought 240 acres of land near Gardner and returned to Ohio and after teaching school four months returned to Johnson county and engaged in farming. He has bought additional land from time to time and now owns about 400 acres of well improved land in Johnson county. Captain Clark resides in Olathe but supervises all his farming operations, usually renting for grain rent. He raises considerable stock and frequently has as many as 100 head of cattle and 200 head of hogs. Captain Clark was married April 25, 1875, to Miss Jennie Wood, a native of Union county, Ohio, and a pupil of his when he taught school there. Mrs. Clark died March 6, 1877, and on November 23, 1880, he was united in marriage to Mary Elizabeth Brown, of Olathe, a native of Hartland, Me. Captain Clark is a Republican and has been actively identified with that party since casting his first ballot. He has served as trustee of Olathe township and was a member of the legislature during the session of 1876-7. He is a charter member of Franklin Post, No. 68, Grand Army of the Republic, and was its first commander. He organized the relief corps in Olathe and is a member of the Grange and was instrumental in organizing the Grange lodge at Gardner, of which he is a charter member. He is the first man in Johnson county who paid his dues and became a full-fledged Granger. He is a member of the Masonic lodge and the Methodist Episcopal church and has been a trustee- in that church for over forty years. He is a stockholder in the Grange store, the Denver Life Insurance Company, the Western States Portland Cement Company and the Sonoma Gold Mining Company. Mr. Clark has resided in the city of Olathe since 1880 and has a beautiful residence on East Park Street. He has always taken a deep interest in educational matters. While a resident of Union county, Ohio, he was president of the county school convention and was elected one of a committee to go to Columbus and aid the legislature in forming better school laws. He was elected secretary of that committee which met with the Ohio legislature and it became his important duty to write many of the school laws of Ohio which are still on the statute books of that State. He was the author of, the first county normal school law in the United States, as well as various other progressive school laws. Additional Comments: Extracted from: HISTORY OF Johnson County Kansas BY ED BLAIR AUTHOR OF Kansas Zephyrs, Sunflower Sittings and Other Poems and Sketches IN ONE VOLUME ILLUSTRATED STANDARD PUBLISHING COMPANY LAWRENCE, KANSAS 1915 File at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/ks/johnson/bios/clark300nbs.txt This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.net/ksfiles/ File size: 7.3 Kb