Van Buren Lawrence Biography This biography is from "Memorial and biographical record; an illustrated compendium of biography, containing a compendium of local biography, including biographical sketches of prominent old settlers and representative citizens of South Dakota..." Published by G. A. Ogle & Co., Chicago, 1898. Pages 454-455 Scan, OCR and editing by Joy Fisher, jfisher@sdgenweb.com, 1999. This file may be freely copied by individuals and non-profit organizations for their private use. Any other use, including publication, storage in a retrieval system, or transmission by electronic, mechanical, or other means requires the written approval of the file's author. This file is part of the SDGENWEB Archives. If you arrived here inside a frame or from a link from somewhere else, our front door is at http://usgwarchives.org/sd/sdfiles.htm VAN BUREN LAWRENCE, for years one of the best known farmers of Alton township, and a veteran of the Civil war, was born in Harrisburg township, Lewis county, New York, January 11, 1831, and a son of Albut and Mehitable (Ryal) Lawrence. Albut Lawrence was a native of Lewis county, New York. and his father, Judah Lawrence, was an Englishman whose father came to America before the Revolutionary war. Judah Lawrence and his son Albut were gunsmiths by trade. Judah Lawrence died about 1845, at the age of eighty years. Albut Lawrence died in Lewis county, New York, about 1877, at the age of seventy-eight years. Mrs. Mehitable Lawrence was born in Lewis county, New York, and died about two years previous to her husband's death, at the age of eighty years. She was a daughter of Peter Ryal who served all through the Revolutionary war in the Continental cavalry, and afterward lived on a farm in Lewis county, New York. His father came to that country from Scotland. Van Buren Lawrence, the subject of this sketch, was reared on a farm and attended the common school of the district, until eighteen years of age when he went to Dodge county, Wisconsin, and two years later to St. Paul, Minnesota, where he worked at the carpenter's trade several years, and later engaged in farming in Dodge county, Minnesota. August 15, 1862, he enlisted in Company I, Ninth Minnesota Infantry, and served until his discharge, October 20, 1864, the most of the time in the Sixteenth Army Corps under General A. J. Smith, with headquarters at Memphis. He participated in the battles of Nashville and Guntown, Mississippi. His health failed and after spending two weeks in the hospital he was discharged, October 20, 1864. In 1879 he came to Brookings county, South Dakota, driving from Dodge county, Minnesota, a distance of three hundred miles, and took a homestead on section 10, Alton township, being one of the first settlers in that township. He drew lumber from Marshall, Minnesota, to build a house and has improved and developed and added to his farm until he now has two hundred and forty acres with first-class improvements and in a high state of cultivation. Besides his extensive interest in general farming, Mr. Lawrence gives special attention to high bred stock and has a fine line of Norman horses. Mrs. Lawrence, whose maiden name was Miss Mary Taurman, is a native of Indiana, and a daughter of William Taurman. She became the wife of our subject in the year 1858, and their wedded life has been blessed to them by the presence of nine children, viz.: Alice, wife of Frank Tiffany, Springfield, Missouri; Almira, wife of Charles Multon, Aurora township, of this county; Albert, a carpenter of Boulder, Colorado; Eunice, wife of Rev. Benjamin Mints, a Congregational minister in Missouri; Cora, wife of Pearl Chamberlain, Boulder, Colorado; Lucinda, wife of Fred Ueltschi, Green county, Missouri; Henry; Carrie; and Rollin. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence have also a number of grandchildren. The family is connected with the Wesleyan Methodist church of Bushnell, and Mr. Lawrence is a member of the Thomas Hooker post, G. A. R., at White. Politically he was formerly a stanch Republican, but, at the organization of the Populist party, he endorsed its platform and since has been a leader in that party in the county. In the fall of 1897 Mr. Lawrence purchased a residence property in the city of Brookings, where he and his estimable wife are now living in well- merited retirement from the onerous duties of farm life, the farm being managed by his sons.