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William T. Modglin
William was born in what is
now Grantsburg Township, Johnson County, October 3, 1833, and
is now (1893) a resident of Metropolis, Massac County.
His father, Benton Modglin, was
born in Wilson County, Tennessee and was reared there and married.
He immigrated to Illinois and was one of the pioneer settlers
of Johnson County, where he secured a tract of Government land
in what is now Grantsburg Township, cleared his farm and made
a home there until his death, about 1851. The maiden name of his
wife was Martha Haley. She was born in Tennessee and died a short
time before her husband, having been the mother of 7 children,
namely: Pleasant H., Nancy, Martha, Joe, William, Benton and James
F.
William T. Modglin attended the
pioneer schools of Johnson County. They were taught in the primitive
log house, with earth and stick chimney, a part of a log being
taken out on one side for a window, and the seats made of split
logs and wooden pins inserted for legs, with no backs behind and
no desks in front. The country was then, of course, but little
improved, there was no railroad for years, and the people lived
exclusively off the products of their farms and the wild game
that was abundant in the woods.
The mother of William T. was accustomed
to carding, spinning and weaving, in that way dressing her children
in homespun cloth and in clothes which were made by her own hand.
After the death of Williams
parents, he went to live with an elder brother in Pope County
and remained there one year. He then engaged in farming with his
brother-in-law one year, and in his twentieth year married, after
which he bought a land warrant of a Mexican soldier for eighty
acres and secured the land in the Grantsburg Township. There was
a log cabin on the place, to which he took his bride and in which
they began housekeeping. The land was heavily timbered and he
commenced at once to clear up his farm, on which he lived one
and a half years, and then traded his 80 acre farm for one hundred
and twenty acres in the same precinct, and lived there until 1879.
In the meantime he bought other land, and at one time he owned
800 acres all in one body. About 1879, his health being very poor,
he removed to Allens Springs, Pope County , and bought a
farm of 129 acres, remaining there until 1891, and then removed
to Metropolis, where he has since retired from active business.
April 16, 1853, William married
Rachel E. Simmons, who was born at Cape Girardeau, Mo., February
8, 1834, and who was the daughter of Lewis Simmons, of Wayne County,
Tenn., his father, Thomas Simmons, being one of the pioneer settlers
in Pope County, having removed from Tennessee. He lived the rest
of his life in that county and died there.
The father of Mrs. Modglin, Lewis
Simmons went to Missouri when a young man, married in that state,
and came from there to Illinois about 1836. He was a pioneer in
Johnson County, secured Government land in what is now Simpson
Township, improved a farm and lived there many years. He then
removed to Grantsburg Township and here resided until his death.
The parents of Mrs. Modglin reared four children, namely: Sarah,
Irving, Hezekiah and Rachel. The children listed are inaccurate.
I have a copy of Lewis Simmons Estate listing Elizabeth Modglin
and her brothers and sisters. Her sister, Catherine was my fathers
maternal Grandmother.*
Our subject , William T. Modglin and his worthy wife have four
children, namely Nancy J., wife of W. J. Miller, who has seven
children; Sarah C., wife of A. D. Howell; Fanny B., wife of William
B. Bivens, who has one child; and Ida M., wife of Leonard Whitesides,
who has one child. The parents of these children are members of
the United Baptist Church, and Mr. Modglin is a Republican in
politics. He served three years in the late war, in Company A,
One Hundred and Twentieth Illinois Infantry, and was captured
and confined in Andersonville, where he remained ten months, and
was so starved that he was not able to stand alone when liberated.
But those privations did not quench the patriotic fire that burned
in his bosom, and we feel safe in saying that he would fight for
his country again if necessary.
______Copied from The Biographical Review of Johnson, Massac,
Pope and Hardin Counties, Illinois Chicago Biographical Publishing
Co. 1893
Obituary
Rachel E. Modglin was born Feb.
8, 1834 _ died Sept. 1st, 1910, age 75 years. She was married
to William T. Modglin April 16th, 1853. To this union nine children
were born, of whom five of them passed away when in infancy, and
four girls living: Nancy M. Miller, of Grantsburg; Sarah D. Howell,
Grantsburg; Fanny B. Bivins, Grantsburg; Ida M. Whitesides, of
Golconda; and nine grandchildren and four great grandchildren.
She also leaves two sisters Sarah J. OBrien and Kate (Catherine)
Simmons and a host of friends and relatives to mourn her loss.
She professed hope in Christ at
the age of sixteen and was a faithful servant until death. In
her last words " I have kept the faith and I want you all
to pray for my children and my companion for I am ready to go."
She was a member of the Baptist church for over 60 years, and
she was ever faithful to her post of duty.
On Sept. 2nd, she was laid to rest
in the Island Cemetery about one-half mile east of her home. (
I do not know about this cemetery, do you?) It must be near Grantsburg,
Johnson County, IL.
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