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| A. Waggoner–J. E. Wagner | ||||||||
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Anthony Waggoner
Born Dececember 31, 1815 | |||||||||
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ANTHONY WAGGONER, farmer, Jackson Twp., Sec. 4; P.O. Anamosa; born December 31, 1815, in Alsace, France; in February, 1827, came to New York City; thence to Oneida Co.; he returned to New York City in 1832, and apprenticed to learn the carpenter trade; October 4, 1837, he came to Hardin Co., Ohio; October 26, 1854, he removed to Jones Co, Iowa, where he has since resided. He owns 128 acres of land. Married Mary A. Emart September 1, 1838; she was born in Somerset Co., Penn., September 22, 1822; died in November, 1863; have four children—Jacob, Lucy E., Eliza Jane and Mary; he has one son by his first marriage—Charles B.; he has also one son by his present marriage—Abiah C. Republican; Christian Church.
From History of Jones County Iowa, 1879, p. 614, and submitted by Mary Kay Kuhfittig. Anthony Waggoner became a resident of New York state in boyhood and there learned the trade of carpenter. After his marriage he emigrated to Ohio in search of better opportunities. He was called upon to mourn the loss of his wife when his son Charles B., their only child, was but two weeks old. Later, he married again, and had three sons and three daughters, by that union. Losing his second wife, he married a third time and his daughter by this union, Abiah, married Charles Waggoner, of Cedar Rapids, who although bearing the same name, is not a relative of the family as far as is known. After his second marriage, Anthony Waggoner moved to Iowa in 1854 and located on a farm in Jones county. His death occurred about 1899, when he was between seventy-five and eighty years of age. History of Jones County, Iowa, Past and Present, R. M. Corbitt, S. J. Clarke Publishing Co., Chicago, 1910, p 261. |
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Barnhart Waggoner
Born August 26, 1809 | |||||||||
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BARNHART WAGNER, farmer, Jackson Twp., Sec. 7; P.O. Anamosa; born August 26, 1809, in Alsace, France; February 22: 1827, he came to New York City, thence to Oneida Co.; in 1833, came to Ohio; in 1853, to Jones Co. He owns 200 acres of land. Married Barbara Emart in 1840; she was born in Somerset Co., Penn., in 1826; died in March, 1862; had eight children—Joseph, George, Anthony, Zachariah, Mary, Phebe, Catharine and Eliza. Second marriage to Grace Tallman in September, 1862; she was born in Franklin Co., Ohio; have one child—John. Democrat. Mrs. W. is a member of the M.E. Church.
From History of Jones County Iowa, 1879, p. 614, and submitted by Mary Kay Kuhfittig.
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Charles B. Waggoner
Born September 15, 1838 | |||||||||
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Charles B. Waggoner, who is residing on his well developed farm of one hundred and sixty acres on section 22, Jackson Township, is one of the representative farmers of Jones County, as well as one of its best citizens. He was born in Hardin county, Ohio, September 15, 1838, a son of Anthony and Ruth (King) Waggoner, natives of France and New York state, respectively.
Charles B. Waggoner was brought to Iowa by his father and step-mother and was reared to manhood in Jones county, having lived in Jackson township ever since coming to the state. His well developed farm of one hundred and sixty acres shows that his understanding of farming is complete, and the fine buildings on his property, all of which were put up by him, demonstrate that he is a carpenter as well as a farmer. In 1863, Mr. Waggoner married Mary May, who was born in Lewis county, West Virginia, March 8, 1846, but was brought to Jones county, Iowa, in 1855 by her parents. She is the daughter of Valentine and Elizabeth (Erbach) May, natives of Germany, where they were married, later emigrating to the United States. They both died after coming to Jones county, Iowa. There were six sons and five daughters in their family. Mr. and Mrs. Waggoner have four children as follows: Jacob, who lives four miles south of Anamosa; Frank, who lives in Jackson township; Walter, who lives in Anamosa; and Ruth, who is at home. Mr. Waggoner is a republican, but, as his time has been so taken up with his agricultural duties, he has never aspired to public honors, preferring to lend his influence and exert himself for the good of the community simply as a private citizen. He and his family occupy an enviable position among their neighbors for they are well liked and held in gratifying esteem. From History of Jones County, Iowa, Past and Present, R. M. Corbitt, S. J. Clarke Publishing Co., Chicago, 1910, p. 258. | ||||||||
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J. F. Waggoner
Born February 26, 1866 | |||||||||
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The farmer of today dominates the situation in Iowa because he holds the balance of power. There are three million more Americans engaged in farming today than in manufacturing and mechanical pursuits, and Iowa is one of the states that contributed many agriculturists to the United States. One of the throughly modern farmers of Jones county is J. F. Waggoner, of Jackson township, who was born in that township on his father's homestead, February 26, 1866. He is the son of Charles and Mary (May) Waggoner, a sketch of whom appears elsewhere in this work, and the second in order of birth in their family of four children.
Until he was twenty-eight years of age, Mr. Waggoner resided with his parents, but he then married and located on his present farm. This property consists of one hundred and twenty acres of farming land on section 22 and eleven acres of timber land on section 32, Jackson township. On this farm he has built a substantial residence, commodious barns, and made many other improvements which give comfort to his family and enable him to care for his stock and machinery. Experience has taught Mr. Waggoner the value of specializing and he is now raising Poland China hogs to the extent of fifty head annually. The marriage of Mr. Waggoner occurred in 1883, when he was united with Carrie Luella Bills, who was born in Jackson township, May 5, 1867, daughter of D. B. and Emma Bills of Anamosa. Mr. and Mrs. Waggoner are the parents of two children, namely; Stanley and Harold. The success which has come to Mr. Waggoner has not been gained by any unusual methods but through the close application of his natural ability and knowledge of farming which he has obtained from his father. He has known how to develop his land and make investments pay, and consequently is now enjoying the results of his years of labor, although still in the very prime of life and filled with ambition for future achievements. From History of Jones County, Iowa, Past and Present, R. M. Corbitt, S. J. Clarke Publishing Co., Chicago, 1910, p. 306. |
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John E. Wagner
Born Born July 13, 1868 1 | |||||||||
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JOHN E. WAGNER, for many years identified with Kansas banking, former president of the State Bankers Association and also well known in politics, being democratic candidate for lieutenant governor a few years ago, has lived at Larned since 1912 and is president of the First State Bank of that city.
His home has been in Kansas since 1883, when he was fifteen years of age. Mr. Wagner was born in Jones County, Iowa, July 13, 1868, and until he was thirty-two years of age he lived on a farm and most of his experiences were those of the agricultural life. He is a son of Bernard Wagner,2 who had a long and interesting career and for a number of years was a resident of Kansas. Bernard Wagner came to Douglas County, Kansas, in 1883 from Jones County, Iowa, and located on a farm near Eudora. He lived there about twelve years and then returned to his old Iowa home, where he died. Bernard Wagner was born in August, 1801, in Alsace, France. His birthplace was only six miles from the city of Strassburg, now one of the most thoroughly fortified towns of the German frontier. As a boy he knew the cathedral city of Strassburg and its famous clock, which is still striking the hours and is considered the most remarkable timepiece in the world. When only twelve years of age Bernard Wagner became a boy soldier in the French army under General Bonaparte. He took part in the 100 days campaign of the last Napoleonic war and was with Marshall Wright in the battle of Waterloo. Doubtless Mr. John E. Wagner is the only son of a veteran of Waterloo in Kansas if not in the United States. Bernard Wagner's parents were country people, among the peasantry of France. He lived at home with them until Louis Philippe ascended the French throne, when he abandoned the country and came to the United States. He had been reared as a Catholic, but he turned against that religion because the church espoused the cause of the monarchical party in France. In 1827 Bernard Wagner immigrated to the United States. He lived in New York City until 1833 and the first work he did after reaching this country was sawing cordwood at twenty-five cents a cord. In 1833 he removed to Ohio and was a farmer there for a number of years. From Ohio he entered the service of the United States Army in the Mexican war, He soon afterward moved out to Iowa and in Jones County bought Indian lands, paying a dollar an acre. He lived there for many years, was a quiet and unpretentious farmer, and enjoyed the highest esteem of his friends and neighbors. This esteem was demonstrated when during the late '60s he was elected a member of the Legislature from Jones County.4 He was the first democrat to hold such an office in sixty years. There were no opportunities for a democrat to accomplish anything in Iowa politics in the years following the Civil war.
Bernard Wagner was married in Ohio to Barbara Emert. She became the mother of eight children, seven of whom reached mature years, namely: Joseph, who went as a youth from Iowa to the Union army, afterwards became a farmer and banker and is now living at Santa Clara, California; George, a rancher at Santa Clara, California; Taylor, a farmer in Cass County, Iowa; Zach, a rancher in Umatilla County, Oregon; and daughters named Mary, Kate, Phoebe and Eliza, all of Jones County, Iowa. Bernard Wagner married for his second wife in Jones County, Iowa, Grace Harrison Tallman, daughter of Nathaniel Tallman, a cousin of President Benjamin Harrison.3 She was born in Winchester, Ohio, in 1829, and died in Douglas County, Kansas, in 1894.
Mr. John E. Wagner was the only son of his father's second marriage. He grew up on a farm, attended the public schools, and afterwards took a course in civil engineering, graduating from Cornell College at Mount Vernon, Iowa, in 1887. He then returned to Kansas and resumed business as a farmer.
During the year 1888 he was correspondent of the St. Louis Globe-Democrat in the Sandwich Islands. He spent a year there. The Sandwich Islands were then in a state of turbulence and revolution while the monarchy was giving way to a republic form of government. Mr. Wagner was expected to report especially on the political situation there. Following this experience he returned to Kansas and took up farming at Eudora.
In 1902 Mr. Wagner became cashier of the Citizens State Bank at Paola. Subsequently he organized the Bank of Lecompton and was its president three-years. Later he was president of the Citizens State Bank at Altoona, Kansas, and was there until he came to Larned.
Mr. Wagner became a resident of Larned January 12, 1912, and bought a controlling interest in the First State Bank and has since been its president. The First State Bank of Larned was organized in 1889. This bank holds a record in the United States for banking profit in proportion to its capital and resources. It now has a capital stock of $60,000, surplus and undivided profits of $60,000, and deposits of $800,000.
Mr. Wagner is also president of the Citizens State Bank at Cimarron, Kansas, the Ash Valley State Bank of Ely, Kansas, and the Farmers State Bank of Wichita. He was honored with the office of president of the Kansas State Bankers Association in 1915.
He cast his first vote in Douglas County, Kansas, in 1892. In that year he supported General Harrison for the presidency. In 1896 on the free silver issue he turned to the democratic party and supported Mr. Bryan that year and twice subsequently. In 1904 he refused to support Judge Parker, and voted for Mr. Roosevelt. In 1902 Mr. Wagner was living in Leavenworth County and was nominated by the democrats of the First District for Congress, his opponent being Charles Curtis. Mr. Wagner was democratic candidate for lieutenant governor of Kansas in 1914 and ran 28,000 votes ahead of his ticket. He has not missed a democratic convention since 1896, and has done much campaigning over the state, having covered nearly every county. He is a forceful speaker, has thorough command of language and facts concerning political questions, and has done much to strengthen the party organization in recent years. Mr. Wagner is a Master Mason, an Odd Fellow, Knight of Pythias and a member of the Elks Lodge at Great Bend and also belongs to the Loyal Order of Moose and several fraternal insurance orders.
He enlisted in Red Cross work in the spring of 1918 and soon went overseas and took up his duties in France. He was first commissioned captain and later promoted to major in Red Cross and for a time he was detailed in Northern England as divisional commander.
At Olathe Kansas, on March 12, 1893, he married Miss Mayme Dunn. Mrs. Wagner was born at Olathe, daughter of James Dunn, who came from Lexington, Kentucky, to Johnson County, Kansas, following the war and for many years was a merchant at Olathe. Mrs. Wagner finished her education at Cincinnati, Ohio, and has made her home one of culture and high ideals. Mr. and Mrs. Wagner have three children: Ralph Lee, Juanita and Grant. Ralph Lee is a graduate of the St. Charles Military College of St. Charles, Missouri, is now vice president of the Citizens State Bank at Cimarron being the youngest bank officer of the state, and he married Ruth Umberger of Larned. The daughter, Juanita, is now a senior in the noted girls' school, Ward-Belmont College at Nashville, Tennessee. The son Grant is a student in the Staunton Military Academy, Staunton, Virginia.
From A Standard History of Kansas and Kansans, by William E. Connelley, Chicago, Lewis Publishing Co., 1919.
1 This biography is filled with errors, beginning with John's birthdate. He is recorded in the 1870 census for Jackson twp., Jones county, Iowa, as 7 years old, and in the 1880 census of the same place as 17 years old. this would put his birth in 1863 instead of 1868, and 20 years old, not 15, when he removed to Kansas in 1883.
2Bernard Wagner, who generally went by the name Barnhart Waggoner, was born in 1809, not 1801. This is consistent with the age he reported for the USCensus in 1860 (50), 1870 (60) and 1880 (70). His father was also named Barnhart Waggoner, and the author of the biography has gotten them confused. It was the father who fought in the Napoleonic wars, as the younger Barnhart would have been only 6 years old in 1815!
3 There is no verification of either Barnhart's service in the Mexican War.
4 The State Law Library of Iowa finds no evidence of Barnhart Waggoner, father or son, serving in the Iowa General Assembly. Could he have served locally in some manner?
5Grace Tallman was the daughter of JOHN Tallman and Elizabeth Harrison, born 11 June 1825, at Canal Winchester, Franklin, Ohio. She is only very distantly related to President Benjamin Harrison—possibly a 6th cousin, 1X removed, but likely farther than that, if at all. (RH)
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