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Biography - HENRY J. DAVIS

Among the worthy citizens that Wales has furnished to this country is the subject of this sketch, Henry Jenkins Davis, of Freedom, Illinois, who was born in Cardiganshire, Wales, March 18, 1830, a son of Samuel Davis. The latter brought his family of sons and daughters to the United States in 1841, making the voyage from Liverpool England, to Castle Garden, New York, in the sailing vessel Batsford, which required four weeks to make the trip. From New York they went up the Hudson river to Albany, thence by canal to Buffalo, and to Newark, Ohio. Their first location was on a farm in Licking county, Ohio, nine miles west of the city of Newark, where they lived five years. Thomas Jenkins, one of the older sons, born in 1818, left the parental roof in 1843, seeking a location on the fertile, frontier prairies of Illinois, whither David, his brother, had preceded him. He reached Chicago by boat and from there came on foot to Millington. In Green's mill, at Dayton, Illinois, he secured employment, and for nine years remained in Mr. Green's service. His acquaintance with the conditions and environments of LaSalle county led him to advise the remainder of the family to come further west, and they arrived in Freedom in 1846.

Samuel Davis, the father, was in limited circumstances, and as cheap as land was at that date he was unable to pay for more than a small tract. His farm was in section 5, Freedom township, and on it he spent the rest of his life, devoting his energies to its cultivation and improvement. He was twice married, his first wife being a Miss Jones; his second wife, her sister. Miss Eleanor Jones, who died in 1848. His children were as follows: Jenkins Davis, who died in Iowa many years ago; Maria, the wife of Elias Jones, died in Ohio; John J., deceased; Thomas J., of the town of Ophir, Illinois; David J., deceased; Rachel, deceased, was the wife of William Williams; Henry J., whose name initiates this review; Evan J., of Iowa; Fred J., of Ottawa, Illinois; Mary, who first married George L. Kinney; he died in 1870, and she is now the wife of John Hoadley, and resides at Earlville, Illinois; with her lives her only daughter, Miss Georgie L. Kinney, at present employed as bookkeeper; and Jane, wife of Plinn Bears, Chicago, Illinois. The father of these children died in 1859, at the age of seventy-seven years.

Henry J. Davis received his education in the district schools of Licking county, Ohio, and LaSalle county, Illinois, and in the broad school of experience. At nineteen he left home and became a wage-worker on farms, at the rate of fifty cents per day, among his employers being Mr. Hosford and John Henderson, prominent farmers. With what he had saved from his earnings in four years he purchased a forty-acre tract of land. But he had no team and had to hire the soil broken. This cost him one dollar and fifty cents per acre, and it was not until the second year after the purchase that he obtained a crop. He continued to work and save and invest in land, and in a few years he found himself with a quarter and then a half section of land. While he was buying he was also improving, and at this writing there is perhaps not a farm in LaSalle county that will excel his own in the cost of improvements and the care and expense with which they are preserved.

June 15, 1854, Mr. Davis married Miss Sarah Jane Crumpton, a daughter of William Crumpton, who came from Maine to Illinois in an early day and became one of the pioneer settlers of LaSalle county. Mrs. Davis has a brother, Samuel Crumpton, who resides in Superior, Wisconsin. Of her sisters we record that Mrs. Ann Bangs resides in Chatsworth, Illinois; and Mrs. Charlotte Davis, wife of Thomas J. Davis, is a resident of Ophir township, LaSalle county. Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. Davis began housekeeping in a primitive way, in keeping with their circumstances, and for a period of forty-five years their lives have been happily blended together.

Mr. Davis is a Republican, but has never sought, nor would he accept, official position, his own private affairs requiring the whole of his attention. He believes in expansion, protection and all other doctrines that have made the United States prosperous and powerful. Both he and his wife are noted for their genial hospitality and are invariably referred to in the most generous and complimentary terms.

Extracted 13 May 2019 by Norma Hass from Biographical and Genealogical Record of LaSalle County, Illinois, published in 1900, volume 2, pages 615-617.


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