OHIO STATEWIDE FILES OH-FOOTSTEPS Mailing List ----------------------------------------------------------------------- USGENWEB NOTICE: These electronic pages may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit or presentation by other organization or persons. Persons or organizations desiring to use this material, must obtain the written consent of the contributor, or the legal representative of the submitter, and contact the listed USGenWeb archivist with proof of this consent. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by OH-FOOTSTEPS Mailing List ------------------------------------------------------------------------ OH-FOOTSTEPS-D Digest Volume 99 : Issue 123 Today's Topics: #1 Re: OH-FOOTSTEPS-D Digest V99 #122 [Elsie Berg ] #3 Fwd: D. RHODES son of George & Mar [DustiGen@aol.com] #4 Bio:D. RHODES son of George & Marg [Karen Borton ] ------------------------------ X-Message: #1 Date: Tue, 23 Feb 1999 17:41:14 -0800 From: Elsie Berg To: OH-FOOTSTEPS-L@rootsweb.com Message-ID: <36D358BA.5D17@interlaced.net> Subject: Re: OH-FOOTSTEPS-D Digest V99 #122 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Questions and comments. I am very pleased with what I find here. I just subscribed to this this week, after a good reference from another researcher, who reported that their first received issue had an obit from an ancestor they were looking for. In this my first week, I find several obits and another clipping from Ashtabula County, OH. As a member of the Ashtabula County Genealogical Society, I am impressed, and we will give this newsletter a plug on our Computer Interest Group (CIG) newsletter page of our ACGS quarterly, "ANCESTOR HUNT." I'd also like to inquire if you have a master database of these obits and clippings, and is it accessible to researchers? Second, I'd like to know if your sources of these clippings are submissions by other researchers? Thankyou for the newsletter and the service. Elsie Berg, Ashtabula Co Genealogical Soc vol. ------------------------------ X-Message: #3 Date: Tue, 23 Feb 1999 22:23:07 EST From: DustiGen@aol.com Subject: Fwd: D. RHODES son of George & Margaret RHODES; Stark Co, OH From: =93Portrait and Biographical Record of Stark County, Ohio; published= by Chapman Bros., Chicago, 1892; page 486-487. D. Rhodes is a prominent farmer, located on section 1, Lawrence Townshi= p, and an early settler in this locality. He was born on the farm where he n= ow resides, January 14, 1820. Mr. Rhodes is a son of George and Margaret (Sm= ith) Rhodes, both natives is Pennsylvania until 1808, when they came to Stark County and located in Canton, which at that time comprised only three buildings. After living in Canton for two years, the Rhodes family came to Lawrenc= e Township and took up the section of land as above named. There they built= a log cabin, which the family entered before it had either floor or chimney. Ge= orge Rhodes bent every energy toward developing his farm, and at the end of a l= ong and useful life the result of his labor was seen in the changed aspect of = the land. Grandfather Rhodes, whose given name was Frederick, was a native of German= y, and came to the United States when a young man. He settled in Pennsylvani= a, but spent his last years in Stark County, Ohio. Our subject=92s mother lived = to be eighty-nine years old. D. Rhodes was one of a family of seven children, which comprised four daughters and three sons. All grew to manhood and womanhood and became heads of families. Our subject is the sixth child and second son. His fi= rst recollection of school days is of the primitive log house, with the most meagre accommodations, and a system in which the birch rod played an important pa= rt. The youth remained with his parents until twenty-one years of age, when he determined to see what fortune held in store for him. He learned the carpenter=92s trade and purchased a threshing-machine, carrying on the two occupations i= n conjunction for twelve years. When, in 1819, the gold excitement penetrated all parts of this country= , our subject started across the plains with a prairie schooner via Salt Lake Ci= ty. His company proceeded at once to California, and after witnessing the novel st= ate of society in Sacramento, Mr. Rhodes proceeded North to the rough-and-ready mines at Nevada City. He spent some two years there in mining, and then returned to Ohio via New York City. Satisfied with his experience of outs= ide life, he settled down to farming. Mr. Rhodes was married in 1850 to Margaret Machaner, who was born in Uniontown. The young people located one mile south of Canal Fulton, where= our subject was engaged in the gristmill business for a year. He then went i= nto the hotel business at Canal Fulton, the hostelry of which he was proprietor b= eing known as the American House. After spending two years there, he sold out = and bought the old homestead where he now lives. Mr. and Mrs. Rhodes have bee= n the parents of thirteen children. The living are named as follows: Emma, Lavina, Belle, Alta, Clara, Charles and Grace. Our subject owns one hundred and t= en acres of the finest land in the township. There is not a foot of waste gr= ound on the farm. He pays attention to stock-raising and has been very successful= .He has held various local offices in the township. He, with the other member= s of his family, belongs to the Christian Church, in which he is a Deacon. ------------------------------ X-Message: #4 Date: Wed, 24 Feb 1999 01:14:19 -0500 From: Karen Borton Subject: Bio:D. RHODES son of George & Margaret RHODES; Stark Co, OH From: Portrait and Biographical Record of Stark County, Ohio; published by Chapman Bros., Chicago, 1892; page 486-487. D. Rhodes is a prominent farmer, located on section 1, Lawrence Township, and an early settler in this locality. He was born on the farm where he now resides, January 14, 1820. Mr. Rhodes is a son of George and Margaret (Smith) Rhodes, both natives is Pennsylvania until 1808, when they came to Stark County and located in Canton, which at that time comprised only three buildings. After living in Canton for two years, the Rhodes family came to Lawrence Township and took up the section of land as above named. There they built a log cabin, which the family entered before it had either floor or chimney. George Rhodes bent every energy toward developing his farm, and at the end of a long and useful life the result of his labor was seen in the changed aspect of the land. Grandfather Rhodes, whose given name was Frederick, was a native of Germany, and came to the United States when a young man. He settled in Pennsylvania, but spent his last years in Stark County, Ohio. Our subjects mother lived to be eighty-nine years old. D. Rhodes was one of a family of seven children, which comprised four daughters and three sons. All grew to manhood and womanhood and became heads of families. Our subject is the sixth child and second son. His first recollection of school days is of the primitive log house, with the most meagre accommodations, and a system in which the birch rod played an important part. The youth remained with his parents until twenty-one years of age, when he determined to see what fortune held in store for him. He learned the carpenters trade and purchased a threshing-machine, carrying on the two occupations in conjunction for twelve years. When, in 1819, the gold excitement penetrated all parts of this country, our subject started across the plains with a prairie schooner via Salt Lake City. His company proceeded at once to California, and after witnessing the novel state of society in Sacramento, Mr. Rhodes proceeded North to the rough-and-ready mines at Nevada City. He spent some two years there in mining, and then returned to Ohio via New York City. Satisfied with his experience of outside life, he settled down to farming. Mr. Rhodes was married in 1850 to Margaret Machaner, who was born in Uniontown. The young people located one mile south of Canal Fulton, where our subject was engaged in the gristmill business for a year. He then went into the hotel business at Canal Fulton, the hostelry of which he was proprietor being known as the American House. After spending two years there, he sold out and bought the old homestead where he now lives. Mr. and Mrs. Rhodes have been the parents of thirteen children. The living are named as follows: Emma, Lavina, Belle, Alta, Clara, Charles and Grace. Our subject owns one hundred and ten acres of the finest land in the township. There is not a foot of waste ground on the farm. He pays attention to stock-raising and has been very successful. He has held various local offices in the township. He, with the other members of his family, belongs to the Christian Church, in which he is a Deacon. -------------------------------- End of OH-FOOTSTEPS-D Digest V99 Issue #123 *******************************************