Notes


Note    N55         Index
From pages 571 & 572 of “Biographical Review of Des Moines County Iowa.”
ROBERT A. McELHINNEY.
An esteemed and honored resident of Washington township, Des Moines county, is Robert A. McElhinney, who was born in the city of Philadelphia, Pa., Feb. 12, 1840. His parents, Samuel and Ann (Elder) McElhinney, were both born in Ireland, and came to America in early pioneer times, settling in Philadelphia, where Mr. McElhinney was engaged for a number of years in the buying and selling of stock. In 1840 they came to Iowa, and located in Louisa county, where they remained for a few years and then removed to Des Moines county, purchasing a farm in Yellow Springs township, upon which he was actively engaged in farming and stock-raising till his death, which occurred when he was seventy-three years old. He was a member and elder in the Reformed Presbyterian church. In politics he gave his vote and hearty support to the Republican party. The devoted mother of our subject died a few years before her husband. They were the parents of eleven children; six of whom are still living.
Robert McElhinney, subject of this review, received his early education in the common schools of Yellow Springs township and in the district schools of Louisa county, Iowa. He assisted upon the home farm till he was twenty-one years old, when he moved to a farm of one hundred and sixty-three and one-half acres on Section 12, given to him by his father, and which is located in Washington township. Here he has lived ever since, having made all of the many improvements on the place, building a good and substantial building for a residence, and other necessary outbuildings for the protection of stock and grain.
He is a progressive and successful farmer and stock-raiser, and has his farm well under cultivation, using all modern machinery and implements. Since coming to this township he has seen a great many changes for the betterment of the county, and he certainly deserves credit for always being ready and willing to assist and do his full share in any undertaking that would bring about a condition that would in any way tend to improve the township.
On Feb. 12, 1861, Mr. McElhinney was twenty-one years of age, and celebrated the day by being united in marriage to Miss Margaret Jane McClurkin, who was a daughter of Matthew McClurkin, who settled in Louisa county at an early day, and died on the road to California during the gold excitement. Unto Mr. and Mrs. McElhinney ten children were born, eight of whom are living: William J., a farmer of Louisa county, Iowa, married Lizzie Chambers, and they have one child, Willetta; Samuel F., a farmer residing in Washington township, married Miss Mary Chambers, and they are the parents of three children, Elbern, Clyde, and Isabelle; Annie, wife of Thomas Robb, a farmer of Yellow Springs township, and the mother of one child, Mary Margaret; Ella May, married J. M. McCloy, a farmer of Colorado; Margaret, at home; Mathew, lives in Minnesota; Robert W., at home; Winnie L., a teacher in the public schools in Yellow Springs township, at home. All of their children were born in Washington township, and two died there.
The beloved wife and mother of this large family passed away at the home place, Feb. 25, 1899. She was a consistent member of the Covenanter church, where her husband still holds membership. Mr. McElhinney was reared in the Republican faith, and in early manhood shared his father's political opinions, but never was an aspirant for public office. He has lived a just and helpful life, the position which he now holds in the esteem of his fellow-citizens being the result of faithfulness in every duty which has become his as a resident of the community. We take great pleasure in being able to place before the public the life history of so prominent a man.

Notes


Note    N56         Index
From pages 201 & 202 of “Biographical Review of Des Moines County, Iowa"
JOHN CALVIN McCLURKIN.
THE great Mississippi valley, with its broad prairies and rich lands, furnishes splendid. opportunities to the farmer and stock-raiser, and Des Moines County is an attractive district of this great region for him who would win success in the raising of stock or in the cultivation of cereals. Mr. McClurkin is today a prominent representative of the former department of business, and has a valuable tract of land in Yellow Springs township. He was born in Louisa County, Iowa, Aug. 29, 1846, his parents being Matthew and Eliza Ann (McClure) McClurkin. The mother died in Louisa County when her son John was only six years old. The father went to California during the gold excitement on the Pacific Coast, making his way to that far-off country in 1849, but he died within a day and a half's travel of the mines, his remains being interred there.
After the death of his parents, John C. McClurkin went to live with an uncle in the paternal line, and remained with him until he attained his majority. He was educated in the district schools, was reared to the occupation of farming, and has always followed that pursuit. He came to Des Moines County about 1863, when a young man of seventeen years of age, and was here employed as a farm hand for some time, working persistently and earnestly in order to acquire a sum of money that would justify him in the purchase of land.
Mr. McClurkin enlisted in Company H, Forty-fifth Iowa Infantry, at Morning Sun, and was mustered into service at Keokuk. They went down the Mississippi River, and from thence to Corinth, where they were stationed to do guard duty at the railroad bridge over the river at Moscow. He served with his regiment until he received his honorable discharge from service at Keokuk, the time of his enlistment being for one hundred days.
About 1875 he bought a farm of T. Reed, and he now owns two hundred and forty acres of valuable land in Yellow Springs and Washington townships, eighty acres being in the former and one hundred and sixty acres in the latter township. Here he raises and feeds from one to three carloads of cattle each year, and he also has upon his place about seventy-five head of hogs of the Poland China breed. He is an excellent judge of stock, and is thus enabled to make careful purchases and profitable sales. He finds that the branch of business which he has chosen as a life work gives him ample opportunity for the exercise of his business talents and industry.
March 11, 1880, Mr. McClurkin was married to Miss Malvina Louisa Reed, a daughter of David and Helena Jane (Carithers) Reed, a native of Indiana. Six children have been born of this union: Anna Jane, David Roy, Mildred Eliza, Leila Myrtie, Lizzie Viola, and John Calvin. Mr. McClurkin has spent his entire life in Iowa, covering now a period of almost sixty years. His attention and interests have been concentrated upon agricultural pursuits, and he is now a prominent representative of stock-raising here. His business methods will bear the closest investigation and scrutiny, and the extent of his operations have made him prosperous.