USGENWEB NOTICE: In keeping with our policy of providing free information on the Internet, data may be freely used by non-commercial entities, as long as this message remains on all copied material. These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or presentation by other organizations. Submitted to the Ohio part of the USGenWeb Archives by Terry Erwin MakeTrees2@aol.com David Dawson Christy was born on 22 Feb 1824 in FAYETTE CO., OHIO. He was blessed in 1848 in 1ST MARRIAGE TO RHODA GALLIMORE. He died on 17 Mar 1906 in Sioux RAPIDS, IA. HISTORY OF THE FAMILY OF DAVID DAWSON CHRISTY The earliest records of the Christy family point toward possible origins in the so-called Scotch-Irish immigrants, actually lowland Scots who had originally been tenant farmers in Northern Ireland from about 1610 to the early 1700s. Robert Christy of Chester County, Pennsylvania was among those settlers who came to Pennsylvania around 1720. It is fairly certain that Robert's son Samuel Christy, born in 1721, is the same Samuel Christy who was the father of Ebenezer Christy by his second wife Sarah Campbell. Robert Christy, one of Samuel's sons from his first marriage, listed his birthplace as Pennsylvania, as did his brother John and their half-brother Samuel (Jr.); Ebenezer was born in 1783 in Virginia so it is likely that the family moved sometime between 1780 and 1783 to Berkeley County, now in West Virginia. The family remained in the area even after the elder Samuel and his wife died in 1804, on a place west of Martinsburg on Tuscarora Creek (see map, facing page). Robert and many of the other Christys never left Virginia. However, in 1818, Ebenezer Christy married Rachel Dawson and soon afterward moved to Fayette County in west central Ohio, not far from the newly commissioned National Road that ran from Baltimore, Maryland to Vandalia, Illinois on roughly the same route as present-day U.S. 40. These frontier lands had only recently been vacated by unknown Native Americans who, upon seeing the influx of settlers, thought it prudent to move on. Ebenezer's brothers Samuel and Marshall, and half- brother John moved to Ohio at around the same time. Samuel H. Christy, Ebenezer and Rachel's firstborn, was born in September 1819; Ebenezer and John were the first schoolteachers in Green and Perry townships that winter. Ebenezer taught for those first years in the "subscription school", so-called because the teacher's salary was raised by contributions from the pupils' families. It is said that Ebenezer was a good teacher -- when he was sober! It apparently was not altogether uncommon for the schoolmasters to discreetly slip outside for a nip now and then and to return smiling to the classroom. The schoolhouses were crude log buildings with rough-hewn wood floors and benches. The windows were placed wherever there were gaps between the logs too big to chink, covered over with greased paper to keep out the elements but which let in enough light for the students to do their work. Another Ebenezer Christy, one of the Indiana Christy relatives, discovered many years later a mathematics book that Ebenezer had handwritten in 1833 for his use in instructing the children; he attributed its authorship to his own father Samuel Henry, though he would have been only 14 in that year. The earliest federal census of Ohio in 1820 lists John and Ebenezer in the same part of Fayette County along with other families that had migrated from Berkeley County. The Creamers and Carrs both married into the Christy family; the Gallimores who had come from North Carolina were also nearby, and some of the members of that family accompanied Ebenezer's son David to Clay County, Iowa a few decades later. They lived in Jasper Township near a village which at the time was called Southe Plymouth but now is listed on maps as Milledgeville. John and his wife Mary (Dawson) Christy had seven children: Robert, Andrew, David Dawson (born in Ohio in 1824 and a double cousin to our David Dawson Christy), Mary Ann, Rachel Ann, Sarah Ann and John Marshall. Many of their names were the same as some of Ebenezer and Rachel (Dawson) Christy's children: Samuel Henry St. George Christy, b. 11 Sep 1819, d. 24 Mar 1904 John Marshall Christy, b. 04 Nov 1821, d. 17 Apr 1904 David Dawson Christy, b. 22 Feb 1824, d. 17 Mar 1906 Sarah Ann Christy, b. 25 Jan 1826 (married Mallow Carr) Elizabeth Marshall Christy, b. 16 Feb 1828 Rachel Dawson Christy, b. 23 Nov 1830 (married David Jaxon Creamer) Ebenezer William Christy, b. 05 Jul 1833 Robert Milton Christy, b. 03 Sep 1836 John M. and David were later to move to Indiana where John married Amanda Tudor; later, other family members joined them (their mother Rachel was widowed in 1837 and in the 1860s moved to a cabin built on Tudor land in Tipton County, Indiana). Ebenezer was shown in the 1830 census but was of course absent from the 1840 record; Rachel was listed as a head of household alongside Samuel and Marshall "Crysty" in 1840. In the 1850 census Rachel's children and various other relatives are listed; in her household were in-laws Jane and Matsey as well as Ebenezer W., John M. and Robert M. David and Rhoda (Gallimore) Christy are there with daughter Mary, living near elder brother Samuel H. and Lydia (Gallimore) Christy and his family. All told, the Christys remained in this part of Ohio for 30 to 40 years. An "M. Christie", possibly Marshall, is listed among Fayette County veterans of the war of 1812 (though it is not certain he lived in Ohio at the time of the war) and both David and John are counted among the members of the Jasper Township militia in 1847 and 1848.By 1860, John and David had moved on to Clinton County, Indiana. David's wife Rhoda had died in 1857 along with her infant son Isaac, and David lived with his daughters Mary and Martha in the same household as John, Amanda, Jesse and Rachel. The Thomas Pucket family lived in the same township and in 1862 David married Thomas' daughter Martha Jane. David's family, the Puckets and the Gallimores all moved to western Iowa shortly thereafter and were again on the edge of the frontier where there were few people and even fewer homes between their Clay County settlement and Fort Dodge, the nearest outpost of civilization. In December 1864 David wrote the following letter to his mother, by that time living in Indiana: Dear Mother: I take my pen in hand to write you a few lines to let you know where I am and how I am getting along. We are all well and at present I truly hope these lines will reach and find you well and doing well. Mother I have bought a farm of 240 acres, with it a cabin and 20 acres in cultivation. I have four cows and six calves and two horses. I have about one hundred bushels of wheat and about the same in corn. Things are very high here. Flour is five dollars per hundred. Corn one dollar per bushel. Potatoes one dollar a bushel. Butter from twenty five to thirty cents per pound. Pork went off at eight dollars per hundred gross. Mother I would like to see you and spend a few pleasant days with you but we are separated so far apart that I fear we will never see each other any more, but if we should not, let us try to live so as to meet in another and happier world than this where parting shall be no more. Mother I must tell you that I have a big girl or rather Martha Jane my wife had it. Its name is Lydia Alice and it was born 25 Nov. 1864. Well I must close with these remarks by requesting you write soon. Mother tell Rachel Creamer that I want her to write to me. I would write some to her but I have nothing of importance to write so farewell. D. D. Christy In 1870 there is no mention of Lydia but Benjamin and Rhoda E. are listed, and the other children were born in succeeding years -- Laban, Ira, David and John. Daughters Mary and Martha had married and were in Clay County in 1870 but later removed to Yates Center, Kansas with their husbands. (Other relatives of the Christy family also lived there: Jim and Elmeda (Christy) RIcketts.) David owned land in Clay and Buena Vista counties, and both Benjamin and Rhoda married into the Hollingsworth family of Sioux Rapids. Ira married Emma Gallimore -- the Gallimore family had traveled from Fayette County to Clinton County, Indiana and to Clay County along with the Christys. As David got on in years, parcels of the land were sold off -- one of which was still in the possession of the Torkelson family as late as 1970, in Buena Vista County. David's children went far and wide -- Benjamin after several moves ended up in eastern Colorado, Rhoda likewise. David E. relocated to Potter County (SD) and later to Milton Junction, Wisconsin; Ira to a farm near St. Paul, MN and John was a barber for many years in Owatonna. Martha died in 1903 and David visited his sons during his latter years. My grandfather Loren's only recollection of him was from a visit David made to Benjamin's farm in Clark County, SD -- he didn't say much, only walked around outside, shook his head (not sure if in approval or disdain) and then traveled on. David passed on while staying at son David E.'s home in Lebanon, Potter County, SD; he and Martha rest in the Lone Tree Cemetery just south of Sioux Rapids, IA.