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Joseph Warren Niles

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Joseph Warren Niles

Birth
Caledonia County, Vermont, USA
Death
22 Jul 1920 (aged 90)
Raglan Township, Harrison County, Iowa, USA
Burial
Magnolia, Harrison County, Iowa, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Father: Oliver Niles, b. 23 Sep 1794, d. 23 Nov 1846
Mother: Sarah Morrill, b. 12 Sep 1804, d. 16 Jul 1889

Sarah married a second time to Joseph Sinclair (St. Clair) and it is under the name of Sarah Sinclair that she is found in Soldier Valley Cemetery.

Joseph W. Niles, a representative farmer of Raglan Township, residing on Section 12, is numbered among the pioneers who found their way to Harrison County in the autumn of 1856. He pre-empted eighty acres of land and commenced improving it, and remained there four years. He entered the land on time and finally lost title to it. Upon coming to the County he did not possess a dollar, and went without his breakfast the first morning because he was too proud to make his case known to the pioneers. He rented land for one year, and was drafted into the Union Army in 1864, reported to Council Bluffs and was then rejected on account of disability. He then purchased the farm he now occupies, upon which he built a log cabin 12 x 24 feet, in which the family lived for fifteeen years, when his present brick house was erected. The brick in his residence he manufactured himself. Upon his premises may be seen a good barn grainary and cribs; wells provided with windmills, and an orchard of fifty trees. His present farm comprises two hundred and sixty acres, ninety of which are under the plow, while the balance is in pasture, meadow and timberland, all surrounded by a substantial and good fence. Our subject's experience in Harrison County, may be divided into three eras--the hard winter of 1856-1857; the War Period and the Railroad era.
He was born in Lyndon, Caledonia County, Vt., September 7, 1829. He is the son of Oliver and Sarah Niles, natives of the Green Mountain State, who had a family of eight children, who were born in the following order: Sarah A., Luther A., Joseph W., Lucius C., Clarinda D., and Annette J., deceased; Sophrona and Wilbur F.
He of whom we write this sketch remained in Vermont with his parents until he reached the years of his majority, at which time he went to Massachusetts and for one year followed the bakery business. We next find him working by the month in Philadelphia, but soon after returned to Vermont, and from there he came to Pottawattomie Co., Iowa arriving November 1, 1856. From there he came to Harrison County in company with his brother, and rented land one year from Lucius Merchant, in Magnolia Township, he acting as "matron and general housekeeper". Subsequently he took a claim in Raglan Township, as above referred to.
Believing in the Scripture that "it is not good for man to be alone", on October 28, 1858, he was united in marriage to Nancy M. Alexander, daughter of Napoleon and Lydia C. (Marshall) Alexander, natives of New Hampshire whose nine children were as follows: Nancy M., Ann, Josephine, Eliza, deceased; Princetta, Flora, Joseph, deceased; Levi W. and Henry, deceased.
The children of our subjecddt and his wife are as follows: Lydia R, born June 2, 1859; Joseph Oliver, September 28, 1861; Lucius C., March 21, 1863; Clara E., April 15, 1865; Mary A., March 3, 1867; William Oscar, August 30, 1870; Albert F., July 30, 1872 and Sarah S., September 3, 1875.
Mr. Niles politically affilliates with the Farmers' Alliance and Industrial Union, while in religious matters he is identified with the Christian Church.
Source: National Publishing Company, editors, History of Harrison County Iowa 1891 (1891; reprint, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts: Higginson Book Company, n.d.), page 795-796.
Father: Oliver Niles, b. 23 Sep 1794, d. 23 Nov 1846
Mother: Sarah Morrill, b. 12 Sep 1804, d. 16 Jul 1889

Sarah married a second time to Joseph Sinclair (St. Clair) and it is under the name of Sarah Sinclair that she is found in Soldier Valley Cemetery.

Joseph W. Niles, a representative farmer of Raglan Township, residing on Section 12, is numbered among the pioneers who found their way to Harrison County in the autumn of 1856. He pre-empted eighty acres of land and commenced improving it, and remained there four years. He entered the land on time and finally lost title to it. Upon coming to the County he did not possess a dollar, and went without his breakfast the first morning because he was too proud to make his case known to the pioneers. He rented land for one year, and was drafted into the Union Army in 1864, reported to Council Bluffs and was then rejected on account of disability. He then purchased the farm he now occupies, upon which he built a log cabin 12 x 24 feet, in which the family lived for fifteeen years, when his present brick house was erected. The brick in his residence he manufactured himself. Upon his premises may be seen a good barn grainary and cribs; wells provided with windmills, and an orchard of fifty trees. His present farm comprises two hundred and sixty acres, ninety of which are under the plow, while the balance is in pasture, meadow and timberland, all surrounded by a substantial and good fence. Our subject's experience in Harrison County, may be divided into three eras--the hard winter of 1856-1857; the War Period and the Railroad era.
He was born in Lyndon, Caledonia County, Vt., September 7, 1829. He is the son of Oliver and Sarah Niles, natives of the Green Mountain State, who had a family of eight children, who were born in the following order: Sarah A., Luther A., Joseph W., Lucius C., Clarinda D., and Annette J., deceased; Sophrona and Wilbur F.
He of whom we write this sketch remained in Vermont with his parents until he reached the years of his majority, at which time he went to Massachusetts and for one year followed the bakery business. We next find him working by the month in Philadelphia, but soon after returned to Vermont, and from there he came to Pottawattomie Co., Iowa arriving November 1, 1856. From there he came to Harrison County in company with his brother, and rented land one year from Lucius Merchant, in Magnolia Township, he acting as "matron and general housekeeper". Subsequently he took a claim in Raglan Township, as above referred to.
Believing in the Scripture that "it is not good for man to be alone", on October 28, 1858, he was united in marriage to Nancy M. Alexander, daughter of Napoleon and Lydia C. (Marshall) Alexander, natives of New Hampshire whose nine children were as follows: Nancy M., Ann, Josephine, Eliza, deceased; Princetta, Flora, Joseph, deceased; Levi W. and Henry, deceased.
The children of our subjecddt and his wife are as follows: Lydia R, born June 2, 1859; Joseph Oliver, September 28, 1861; Lucius C., March 21, 1863; Clara E., April 15, 1865; Mary A., March 3, 1867; William Oscar, August 30, 1870; Albert F., July 30, 1872 and Sarah S., September 3, 1875.
Mr. Niles politically affilliates with the Farmers' Alliance and Industrial Union, while in religious matters he is identified with the Christian Church.
Source: National Publishing Company, editors, History of Harrison County Iowa 1891 (1891; reprint, Salem, Essex County, Massachusetts: Higginson Book Company, n.d.), page 795-796.

Inscription

JOSEPH W. NILES
SEPT. 7, 1829-JULY 22, 1920



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