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MOFFAT COUNTY, COGENWEB PROJECT

BIOGRAPHIES D - H

Extracted from "Progressive Men of Western Colorado" generously donated by the 'Museum of Northwest Colorado', email musnwco@cmn.net

Transcribed by Shelley Barnes shellbbco@prodigy.net

NAME
BIOGRAPHY
DAVIDSON, James J. It is of old Pennsylvania stock that the subject of this memoir comes, his parents, George W. and Nancy Davidson, being natives of that state and belonging to families long resident on its prolific soil. the elder Davidsons farmed in their native state and in Ohio, Missouri and Illinois, the latter being their final home. The father served on the Union side in the Civil war, going in as a private and being mustered out as a captain. He made a good record and, although in many important engagements, he escaped unhurt. He was also successful in farming. He ardently supported the Republican party in politics, and both he and his wife were Methodists. They had a family of nine children, Maria, John, George, Joseph, Hiram, James J., William, Nancy and Katharine. Joseph and Geroge are dead. James J. was born in Trumbull county, Ohio, on June 30, 1831. He attended the common schools and early in life took his place in the ranks of the world's workers so as not to be a charge on his parents or others. He remained on the home farm in Illinois until 1847, then started on a trip to California with an ox team, but on reaching Utah he abandoned the journey temporarily and accepted employment in caring for stock. In 1849 he completed his trip to the golden State and after arriving below Auburn on the American river, he located some placer mines which proved to be rich and very profitable. the failure of his health obliged him to seek a milder climate and he went in 1850 to southern California, locating in San Bernardino county and afterward moving to Los Angeles county. There he gave attention to ranching and raising stock and also engaged somewhat in teaming. He remained until 1875, then disposed all his California interests and moved to Wyoming, locating on Snake river, taking a squatter's right to a good tract of land which he improved and lived on until 1880, then sold at a good profit. During that year he changed his residence to Colorado, making his home with his son George, who owns one of the best ranches of its size in Routt county, productive in grain, hay and vegetables and is furnished with good buildings and other improvements, containing a wide grazing range for the cattle which are produced in numbers, and well watered for purposes of irrigation. When the son located here the nearest settler was Mr. Perkins, on Snake river, sixteen miles distant. Mr. Davidson is a Republican in political conviction and action and a serviceable worker for the success of his party. He was married on September 4, 1851, to Miss Lydia Shepherd, a native of Clay county, Missouri, the daughter of Samuel and Charity Shepherd, who were born in Vermont, and who, after living in a number of places, finally located in California, where they ended their lives. The father was a soldier in the war of 1812, a wheelwright by trade and in later years of his life a farmer. He died on October, 1877, having survived his wife just six months. Their only living child is Mrs. Davidson. She and her husband have had fourteen children, but six of whom are living: Viola, wife of Lycurgus Colbert; George W.; Winifred, wife of William Ham; Ethel, wife Price Sims; Andrew and Carl. The ranch in which Mr. Davidson is interested is managed by his son George W., who married on February 17, 1883, to Miss Emma Lamb, a native of Iowa. The son, like the father, is a Republican.

DEAKINS, William R.

To be born and reared on a farm and received a limited education at the district schools is the common lot of millions of men in this country wherein the agricultural interests so largely prevail; and to follow the industry to which they are bred and stick to it through life is also the lot of millions. And in this class of people is to be found our best, most progressive and most self-reliant citizenship in all sections of the country. This has been the lot of William R. Deakins, of near Pagoda, Routt county, one of the enterprising and representative cattle and ranch men of his section who, although for from the place of his nativity and amid far different surroundings form those of his youth and early manhood, is still engaged in the paternal occupation of farming with such modifications of conditions and circumstances as the difference of location makes necessary. He was born in Buchanan county, Missouri, on April 17, 1865, the son of Henry and Sarah C. Deakins, the former a native of eastern Tennessee and the latter of Missouri. The father was a successful farmer, a Democrat in politics and a man of influence in the neighborhood of his home. Of the seven children of whom they were the parents two died in infancy and William R., Henry T., Sarah J., Charles M. and John W. are now living. The father died on October 17, 1882, and the mother now makes her home in eastern Kansas. Their son William remained at home and assisted his parents until he reached the age of twenty-two, then in June, 1887, he became a resident of this state and pre-empted a portion of the ranch on which he has since resided and which he has increased to three hundred and sixty acres. He has one hundred and twenty-five acres under cultivation and producing good annual crops of hay and grain. He also raises large numbers of cattle and finds the industry agreeable and profitable as an occupation. Mr. Deakins was one of the first settlers on Williams fork and he is accounted one of the most progressive citizens of the region. He took up his land in its state of natural wildness without improvements of any kind. The soil was still virgin to the plow and its wild growth was profitless to the husbandman. From this condition he has by his industry and energy redeemed his place and made it a comfortable and attractive home, bountiful with the fruits of cultivated life and smiling with the evidences of thrift and taste. Fraternally Mr. Deakins is a master Mason and politically an enthusiastic Democrat. In the public affairs of his community and county he takes a serviceable part, cheerfully bearing his share of the burdens and modesty giving his share of the counsel needed for their proper management and the proper development of the best interests of the people. On all sides he is considered a wise, upright and useful citizen, worthy of the cordial regard in which he is generally held throughout the community.
DUNSTAN, Richard J. This valued and extensively useful citizen of Colorado, who is a younger brother of Thomas Dustan, and was for many years his active partner in various productive enterprises (see sketch of Thomas elsewhere in this work). Was born in Australia on May 29, 1863, and accompanied his parents to this country in 1872. The family lived in Kansas for a number of years, and the parents died in that state. Richard remained at home with them until 1878, then came to Colorado and located at Denver, where he entered into partnership with his brother Thomas, as has been noted. They were engaged in railroad contract work until 1885, when they separated and Richard conducted a hotel for two years. In 1887 he moved to the Williams Fork country, in Routt county, and squatted on a claim which he pre-empted after the survey was made. He has since purchased one hundred and thirty acres additional and now has a good ranch of two hundred and ninety acres, of which one hundred acres produce excellent crops of hay, grain, vegetables and small fruits. His chief resources is his cattle industry and he has an extensive range of good grazing ground. The improvements on the place were made by himself, and their character and the general condition of the place show him to be a man of good judgment, enterprise and skill. From 1886 to 1892 he was associated with his brother Thomas in the ranching and stock industry, but since the latter year they have conducted separate industries in these lines. Richard has been very successful in his undertakings, has risen to prominence in the community and has a commanding influence in the councils of the Republican party, of which he is a devoted member. On May 29, 1884, he was united in marriage with Mrs. Josephine (Ferris) Hauck, a native of Oswego, New York, and a daughter of Norman F. and Harriett (Simons) Ferris, the former a native of Canada and the latter of New York state. They first settled in the state of New York, having been married in Canada, and afterward moved to Illinois, and in 1859 to Wisconsin. where they ended their days, the father dying in 1889 and the mother in 1892. The father was a sailor on many seas and the mother reared the family. Their offspring numbered eleven, five of whom died in infancy or early life. The six living are Elizabeth, Josephine, Charles, Julia, Mary and Lucias. By her former marriage Mrs. Dunstan had two children, Mary and John W., the daughter having died in infancy. From her marriage with Mr. Dunstan there are also two Augusta M. and Thomas H. The latter was the first white boy born on the Williamsfork. Augusta M. was one of the particularly bright pupils at the Grand Avenue high school in St. Louis, Missouri. She there pursued a special course in Latin and science, and made a high reputation as an essayist, six of her productions being placed on exhibition at the St. Louis World's Fair in 1904. The subjects were "People We Meet" "History Note Books," "Greek Gymnastics," "Private Life of the Greeks," "French Examination Papers," and "Geometry Exercises." As a Colorado product she is highly honored in the state for her scholastic attainments and literary ability.

DUNSTAN, Thomas

Thomas Dunstan, of near Pagoda, Routt county, who is considered one of the most substantial and successful ranchers and stock men in his portion of the state, is a native of Australia, born on November 21, 1847. His parents also were born in that country and emigrated to the United States in 1872, locating in Kansas where they passed the remainder of their lives in profitable farming. The father died in 1886 and the mother in 1901. They had three children, Mrs. George Jeniver, Richard J. and Thomas, all of whom are living. Thomas, the youngest, received a common-school education and was well prepared for the business of life and future usefulness on the paternal homestead. He came to this country with his parents in 1872 and lived with them in Kansas until 1878. He then moved to Colorado and, locating in Denver, farmed with varied success for a few years. After following other occupations for a time, he furnished teams under contract for grading the ground for the station of the Denver & Rio Grande Railroad in that city, excavated the ground for the round- house of the same road and graded for the city water works. In these works he was in partnership with his brother Richard. They also shipped to Pueblo and there they continued the same line of operations. One of the profitable contracts they had and completed was straightening the railroad between Pueblo and Salida. Thomas was afterward employed in the shops of the Denver & Rio Grande at Denver as a machinist's helper. In 1886 he secured by pre-emption a portion of his present ranch, and to the original tract he has added forty acres by subsequent purchase. He has brought eighty acres of this land to an advanced state of productiveness in hay and grain, and the rest is excellent grazing ground for his cattle which he raises in large numbers. From 1886 to 1892 his brother Richard was an active partner in the ranching and cattle industry, but since the year last named Thomas has conducted the business alone. Mr. Dunstan is a zealous Republican in political faith and is prominent and influential in his party as he is progressive and successful in his business. He is popular throughout his neighborhood with all classes of people, and is given up to be one of the leading and representative citizens in his portion of the county. Although not a native of this country he is warmly attached to its institutions and thoroughly devoted to the welfare of its people. His residence in various parts of it has made him familiar with its features and the interests of its different sections, and this enables him to take a broad and liberal view of its needs and see with a broad mind and true public-spirit, and those who know him well value him for his genuine patriotism, his extensive general information, his tolerance of differences of opinion and his strong devotion to truth in every form without regard to sectional prejudices.
EGRY, Charles F. One of the leading, most enterprising and most successful ranch and cattle men of Williams fork country, where he owns a large ranch in advance state of cultivation and with good improvements on it which he has made himself, converting a barren wilderness into one of the best ranches and most attractive homes in the section Charles F. Egry, of Pyramid, Routt county, is now enjoying the fruits of his useful and unremitting labors and is comfortable in an estate which he has won from obdurate conditions and through many trials by his own persevering industry and energy. He is a native of the great state of Ohio, born at Hamilton, Butler county, on November 25, 1867. In early youth after short and irregular attendance at the district school, he began to bear the burden of life for himself. He learned the trade of plumbing and gas fitting and wrought at it ten years in his native state. In 1888 he came to Colorado and located on his present ranch and here he has since conducted a general ranching, and cattle industry of large proportions and commensurate profits. In 1896 the post office of Pyramid was established at his home and he has ever since been the postmaster. He belongs to the Masonic order. On October 12, 1893, he united in marriage with Miss Rose E. Johnson, a native of Colorado, daughter of Anton L. and Annie (Abbel) Johnson and sister of Louis J. and Albert T. Johnson, sketches of whom appear elsewhere in this work, which see for biographical notes of the parents. Mrs. Egry prior to her marriage was a teacher in the public schools at Craig. In the Egry household six children have been born and are living, Anna C., Fred L., Helena M., Mary E., William L. and Albert C. Mr. Egry's father was Frederick Egry, a native of Germany, who came to America at the age of twelve years and learned the printer's trade. The mother, whose maiden name was Caroline Quoff, was born in Ohio, and, with her husband, settled at Hamilton, Ohio, where they ended their days, the mother dying in 1873 and the father on February 18, 1903. He was the editor and owner of the Hamilton Telegraph for many years and later carried on a profitable insurance business. In politics he was an ardent Democrat and taking an active part in municipal affairs at Hamilton, was elected councilman and mayor of the city several times. Fraternally he was connected with the Masons, Odd Fellows and the Untied Workmen. Of four children born in the family three are living William L., Alois E. and Charles F. Successful in business, prominent in social life, influential in local affairs and generally highly respected, Mr. Egry is easily one of the leading citizens of the county and fully deserves the regard and good will of his fellow men which he so largely enjoys.
FINLEY, Rowland W. The settlement and growth of Routt county, which began scarcely more than twenty years ago, has been rapid and in many respects surprising in volume and vigor, and as well in the productiveness of its forces. But the features of the case, however conspicuous and striking, are in large measure easily explained. The county has been generously blessed by nature in the fertility of the soil and its adaptability to certain lines of industry, and when the fullness of time had come it was occupied by an unusually fertile, enterprising and capable class of people. They came from many sections of our own country and many portions of other lands, and they have assimilated harmoniously and blended their merits into a civilization at once progressive and conservative, combining potency and flexibility in a marked degree, and thus preparing to meet all requirements and conquer all difficulties. That great hive of industry and varied wealth of production, the state of Pennsylvania, contributed its quota to the army of occupation and conquest, and in that quota the subject of this sketch is entitled to honorable mention, although he is a late comer. He has at least well maintained the reputation and standard of the earlier arrivals, and met with proper spirit the demands of his day as they did those of their day. He brought to the performance of his duties here not only a good scholastic education, but a wisdom ripened by a fund of general information and an experience gathered in varied occupations in a number of different places under circumstances of great diversity. Mr. Finley was born at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on June 1, 1851. His parents were James and Catherine (O'Neal) Finley, the former a Pennsylvanian by nativity and the latter born in Vermont. The father was a prominent merchant and miller. In the early part of his career, in company with two other merchants, he went to Europe to purchase silks and other fine dress goods for his trade, and while they were returning with their purchases on board, the ship was wrecked. The goods and the other merchants were lost, and the elder Finley was one of the very few of the passengers rescued. He continued his mercantile operations many years, rose to prominence in business circles and in politics as a Whig, had a high social standing, and occupied an elevated post in the councils of the Presbyterian church, to which he and his wife belonged. He died in February, 1858, and his widow in October, 1900. Four of their seven children living, John B., Byron S., Rowland W., and Florence E.. The son, Rowland W., received a good district school and college education, a part of which he paid for out of his own earnings, which began to accumulate at an early age of his life. When he was thirteen he left his native state and come west to Iowa, arriving at Ottumwa with but fifty cents in money and no settled occupation in prospect. He made his way into Marion county, that state, and there secured employment as a farm hand, which was very welcome although the wages were small. In due time he became a farmer on his own account, remaining in Iowa until 1878, when he moved to Kansas. During the twenty years of his life in that state he farmed, raised stock, conducted mills and became prominent in local politics on the Democratic side, serving as county commissioner, county clerk and as a member of the board of regents of the state Agricultural College. In 1890 he built the City Rolling Mills at Goodland, and had also an interest in the Colby Mills there. These he helped to conduct with vigor and success until the financial crash of 1893, which, together with successive droughts, occasioned severe losses. Mr. Finley, however, continued milling until the spring of 1897. At that time he came to Colorado to live and located in Routt county. Until 1900 he lived on the ranch located by Hulett & Torrence in the early days, and on which still stands the first log cabin built in this part of the country. This ranch he bought and still owns. In 1900 he purchased the ranch on which he now lives, which adjoins the other one, the two comprising two hundred and sixty acres, of which two hundred are under cultivation. Hay and cattle are his principal products, but he also raises good crops of the other farm products grown generally in the region. In the fraternal and political life of the county he has taken an active and prominent part, being a Knight-Templar Mason, and having served as county commissioner since 1902. He was married on December 24, 1874, to Miss Laura E. White, a native of Licking county, Ohio, the daughter of William W. and Levina (Hewitt) White, the father born in Richland county, Ohio, and the mother in Washington county, Pennsylvania. They were farmers and members of the Baptist church. Politically the father was a Republican. He died on October 29, 1891, and the mother is now living in Cass county, Iowa, where they settled a number of years ago. They had eleven children, of whom nine are living, Daniel, Mrs. Finley, Robert E., Lincoln, Alice, Margaret, George T., Emma E., and John H. in the Finley household five children have been born. Lavina M. died on May 9, 1879, while James W., William P., Robert B. and Mrs. Catharine Woolley are living.

FORKNER, Thomas A.

The Civil war in this country, which left the states that seceded from the Union crippled in all their industries, poor in finances and awfully prostrated in their civil institutions, was yet not an unmixed evil, since those conditions impelled many of their best and brightest men to seek new homes in the still undeveloped West, and thus open new sources of wealth to the country and of opportunity to individual men and women. And this tide of migration toward the setting sun, where there were untrodden fields and vast rewards for enterprise, was not stayed until succeeding generations followed the first and filled up in some measure the mighty domain then awaiting occupation and development. Thomas A. Forkner, of near Craig, Routt county, one of the enterprising and successful ranch and cattle men of that neighborhood, was among the men thus indicated, who although born South in the midst of the war, grew to man's estate before its trial of horror was wholly overgrown by the beneficent products of a later time. His life began in Monroe county, Tennessee, on June 17, 1863, and he is the son of Thomas and Julia A. (McGuire) Forkner, of that state, where the father has throughout his mature life been a prominent planter and manufacturer of tobacco, this being the principal crop raised on his plantation. He supports the Republican party in politics and belongs to the Masonic order in fraternal circles. The mother died in her native state on May 2, 1898. They had seven children, six of whom are living, John, Lawrence, Stephen, James, Nancy and Thomas A. The last named received only a common- school education, and worked on the paternal homestead until he reached the age of twenty-one years. He then engaged in farming for himself, and continued to be so occupied in his native state until 1891, when he came to Colorado and for a time after his arrival here he worked as a hired hand on ranches. He was desirous, however, of conducting a business for himself, and to this end he leased a ranch and began raising cattle. In 1898 he bought the one he now owns and farms, which was one of the six taken up in 1883, the first ones occupied in the neighborhood of Craig. He has one hundred and sixty acres and from the time of settling on the land he has been making improvements and increasing his arable acreage until he now has a comfortable and well-equipped home, with one hundred acres under good cultivation, yielding abundant supplies of hay, grain and vegetables. He also raises cattle in numbers and considerable quantities of small fruits. In the ranching and stock industries he is prominent and successful, in the public life of the country he is influential and helpful, and in fraternal circles he has an appreciated membership in the Masonic order and its adjunct, the order of the Eastern Star, and also in the Woodmen of the World. Politically he is an earnest and active Republican. On December 28, 1887, he was united in marriage with Miss Mary E. Norvell, a native of Tennessee. They have three bright and interesting children, Bessie M., Rosie M. and Clifton E.
GREEN Robert H.

Born and reared on the frontier, and making his preparation for the battle of life amid its incidents of thrilling interest, wherein often every day was fraught with danger, all time was laden with toil, and the lot of man one of hardship and privation, Robert H. Green grew to manhood in an environment well adapted to produce courage and self-reliance in spirit, strength and suppleness of body, and self knowledge of the most valuable kind. His opportunities for education were found mainly in the rugged school of experience, and his knowledge of men in boyhood an youth was gained almost wholly from contact with the hardy resourceful pioneers. He was born on a farm near Springfield, Missouri, on March 27, 1855, and even in his boyhood had contact with the stirring activities of our progressive colonization which found expression in his section in the border wars over the question of slavery. He remained with his parents until he reached the age of twenty, bearing a cheerful and serviceable part in the labors of the farm, and in 1875 set out for himself in a new country, as they had done in their early lives. Coming to Colorado then, he passed a year in various occupations at Denver. In 1876 he rented a ranch on Plumb creek, and during the next five years he himself devoted to its improvement and cultivation. In 1881 he returned to Missouri, but not finding conditions to his liking, and making no financial headway by his really vigorous efforts, he once more became a resident of Colorado, leasing a ranch in Douglas county on which he lived until 1885. He then moved to Routt county and took up a homestead of one hundred and sixty acres eight miles east of Craig, which he sold after improving it. In 1894 he purchased another, a part of which is his present home. His purchase was a quarter-section, but he has sold all except forty acres, enough to suitably employ his energies in the ranching and cattle business which he conducts on it, raising good crops of hay, grain and vegetables, and numbers of high grade cattle, the latter being his main source of revenue. He has taken an active part in the public local affairs of his county and grown to prominence and influence among its people. Earnestly supporting the Republican party in political matters, he is regarded by the members of the organization as wise in counsel and vigorous and serviceable in action, and has been chosen by them to official station of prominence and responsibility. He was elected county commissioner in 1900 and for many years has served as a justice of the peace, and also as school director. He was married on February 11, 1875, to Miss Eleanora Hays, who was born in Missouri. Of their seven children a daughter named Laura died in infancy, and Irwin E., Wesley, Willis, Robert, Eleanora and Alice are living. Mr. Green is the son of Louis and Nancy Green, natives of Tennessee and early emigrants to Missouri. In early life the father was a farmer, but he is now engaged in the Christian ministry in the Baptist church. The mother died in 1898. Nine children were born to them, of whom are living, Frank, James, Benjamin, William, Ida and Robert H.

HAMILTON, Riley S.

Riley S. Hamilton, a prominent, progressive and highly respected citizen of Routt county, who is extensively engaged in the stock industry in the neighborhood of Hamilton, was born in Carroll county, Ohio, on February 1, 1862, and is the son of Henry S. and Mary A. (Slates) Hamilton, natives of Ohio, who moved to DeKalb county, Missouri, in 1869, and there engaged in farming, an occupation which they are still following, with their home near Maysville, that state. The father was a shoemaker in Ohio, but with a longing for agricultural pursuits, he determined to devote himself to them and found his choice wise and his enterprise profitable. His death occurred there June 18, 1904. Their offspring numbered nine. One died in infancy and Riley S., Thomas H., Hannah (Mrs. William H. Miller), Fred E., Edward, Elizabeth, and James and William, twins are living. Riley, the first born on the children who are living, grew to manhood on the home farm in Missouri and was educated at the common schools with rather meager opportunities. He remained at home assisting his parents on the farm until he reached the age of nineteen, then, in 1881, came to Colorado and located at Breckenridge. Here for a few months he worked in the mines for wages, then moved to South Park and found employment until winter on a ranch. During the winter he was employed in hauling lumber at Last Resort, after which he leased a ranch in the vicinity of Fort Collins which he farmed two years. In July, 1885, he became a resident of Routt county, and in May following took up a pre-emption and a timber claim, the two amounting to three hundred and twenty acres. These he has added to until he now owns five hundred and twenty acres, two hundred of which he has under productive cultivation. His principal industry is raising cattle, however, and this he conducts on an extensive scale. His was the first ranch located on Moore Rapids creek, and when he settled there the whole section was wild and unbroken, without roads, bridges or other conveniences of a public nature. He gave himself with ardor and energy to the improvement and cultivation of his property, and found steady and increasing rewards for his labor. Soon other settlers located in the neighborhood and the rapid progress and development of the region followed. As a pioneer there Mr. Hamilton was an important factor in building up the country and the village which grew up near him was named in his honor. He is a very broad-minded and enterprising man, with a keen desire for all improvements involving the general welfare of the community, and takes an active and serviceable interest in every phase of its public life. In fraternal relations he is a Freemason, and in political matters is independent. On April 16, 1892, he united in marriage with Miss Clara Duse, a native of Kendall county, Illinois, and the daughter of William and Sophronia (Watkins) Duse, the former born in Germany and the latter in the state of New York. They settled in Missouri at an early day and located near Maysville, where they are still living and are successfully engaged in farming. Both are members of the Methodist church. The father is a Republican in politics. Seven of the eight children of Mr. and Mrs. Duse are living, Hattie, Mary J., William A., Herbert M. and Henry M. (twins), Edward and Clara E. A daughter named Tina died on May 30, 1902. Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton are the parents of two children, Earl L. and William Henry.

HARRIS, John L.

It is interesting in the career of any man to have settled in a new country when in its wild condition, abounding in the untamed products to which it has been given up for centuries, when the primeval forest still shelters the soil from the sunshine, when wild beasts and yet more savage men are its only forms of animal life, and its spreading prairies are verdant with only the unprofitable vegetation or untamed grasses and gay with only the wild flowers indigenous to the uncultivated soil, and live to see it blooming and fruitful with all the products of cultivated life and abounding in all the blessed concomitants of civilization, even if he have no extensive part in bringing about the change. Such a man is a connecting link between the active, stirring and often soul harrowing present, and the easy, listless, fruitless, and seemingly inanimate past. But when it can be added that he has contributed substantially and essentially to effecting the change both in directing the forces that have wrought it and in swelling their volume, the subject becomes one of striking and thrilling eventfulness. Such a subject is he who now engages attention in the person of John L. Harris, of Routt county, whose attractive and highly improved ranch of two hundred and forty acres of tillable land is a pleasure to the eye, and whose large and well managed cattle business gives agreeable food for thought to the mind. Mr. Harris is a native of Monroe county, Tennessee, born on April 7, 1862, and the son of George W. and Mary E. Harris, also natives of Tennessee, where the mother died on February 8, 1896, and the father is still living. The latter has been all his life a successful farmer, a man of public-spirit, and a citizen ardently devoted to the welfare of his country, and especially to that of his own country and state, finding that welfare best provided for, according to his convictions, in the principles and methods of government of the Republican party, which he has loyally supported from his early manhood. Ten children born to this couple are living, Sallie C., wife of William W. Adair, whose story is told elsewhere in this volume; John L., the immediate subject of this writing; James; William; George; Martha, wife of John Carpenter; Rebecca, wife of Joseph Carpenter; Tennie, wife of Louis Myers; Mrs. William Dehart and Mrs. James Stillion. John L. had youth the usual experience of country boys of his class and locality, attending the country schools when he could and at other times assisting in work on the farm. He remained at home until he was twenty-one years old, then started in life for himself, working on farms, teaching school and clerking in stores in his native state until 1886. He then went to Texas and remained there one year and in 1887 he came to Colorado and located a ranch at Cross mountain, at the same time engaging with the Lily Park Cattle Company as a range rider and ranch hand, remaining with this company for five years. In 1891 he quit its service, sold is ranch at a good profit, and left for Wyoming, where he passed nearly a year working in the cattle industry and at other occupations. In 1892 he returned to this state, selecting Steamboat Springs as his home, and there he went into mercantile business with William W. Adair, the connection lasting until 1897, when he severed it and bought the ranch which he now occupies. This comprises two hundred and forty acres, and on it he made all the improvements it contains and brought to cultivation the whole body of its land. Here also he has built up a lage and profitable cattle business, giving close and constant attention to its needs and studying all its features and details with the eye of an observant master. To such an extent has he made this study effective that he is regarded on authority on all questions touching the industry from its start to its end. He is a Democrat in politics and as such takes an earnest and serviceable part in the councils and campaigns of his party, at the same time devoting an enlightened intelligence and fruitful energy to the best interests of his community and county without regard to party considerations.

HERON, Alexander

Of sturdy Scotch ancestry on his mother's side and of as sturdy English on father's, Alexander Heron, of near Pagoda, Routt county, combines in himself the best traits of both races and has brought to the furtherance of his interests in this country the vigor, enterprise and breadth of view which he inherited from both parents. He was born in Glasgow, Scotland, on March 30, 1868, and is the son of Peter and Katharine (McDonald) Heron, the former a native of England and the latter of Scotland. The father was a baker and worked at his trade for more than thirty years. He then turned his attention to farming and was successful in the venture. He was a Catholic and the mother belonged to the Free Church of Scotland. The latter died on October 13, 1871, and the former on October 4, 1884. Eight of their ten children are living, Alexander, George, James, Edith, Anna, Emily, Mary and Isabella. Alexander, the fifth born of those living, had few and scant educational privileges. In 1885, at the age of seventeen, leaving the scenes and associations of home, he braved the heaving ocean with high hopes for the land of promise on this side of the water, where there was abundance of opportunity for thrift and enterprise and ample rewards for worth and industry. Arriving in Colorado, he located on Blue river, where he found profitable employment as a ranch hand. After passing a year in this work he went to Dodge City, Kansas, in search of more genial occupation, but not finding the country there to his taste, he returned to Colorado and found his way to the prolific region which borders Williams fork in Routt county. In the meantime, however, he had resumed ranch work at Rocky Ford and Colorado Springs, where he remained until 1888. On Williams fork he pre-empted a ranch which he still owns and on which he has expended his labor to good advantage. Until 1898 he was in partnership with his brother George in this enterprise, but since then he has owned and managed the ranch alone, the partnership being dissolved harmoniously. The ranch now comprises four hundred and eighty acres and two hundred and fifty acres are good arable land now under advanced cultivation and yielding abundant harvest of the crops peculiar to the region. Cattle-raising is the chief industry and this is carried on extensively and profitably. But grain is raised in large quantities, especially wheat for which the land on this ranch is said to be the best on the fork. With characteristic enterprise and commendable faith in his knowledge on the subject, Mr. Heron introduced the Angora goat into this section, and the results of the undertaking have justified his prescience and highest hopes. He owns a fine flock of the goats and finds them a source of considerable revenue. In political relations Mr. Heron is a Republican. He was married on December 14, 1899, to Miss Jessie Cameron, a native of Ingham county, Michigan, where her parents, John and Agnes (Wasson) Cameron, natives of Ireland, settled when they arrived in this country, and where they made their final home. They were prosperous farmers, and the father supported the Democratic party in American politics. He died in Michigan in 1874 and is widow in 1880. Mr. and Mrs. Heron have a host of friends in their community and are always named among the best citizens of the neighborhood.

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