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Ripley Co
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Zarah A Eaton
ZARAH A. EATON - This enterprising business man is successfully engaged
in dealing in timber, and is also the proprietor of a well-appointed mercantile
establishment at Varner, Mo. He is a native of Licking County, Ohio, where he first saw
the light of day in 1829, but his parents, Joseph and Euincy (Curtis) Eaton, were born in
the state of New York, the birth of the former occurring in 1796. They moved to Ohio in
1811, and in 1838 to Peoria County, Ill., where Mr. Eaton died in 1857, and his widow in
Woodford County, Ill., in 1890. He was a Congregationalist in his religious belief, and
she was a Methodist. Mr. Eaton followed farming throughout his life, was a man of prominence
and influence in the different localities in which he resided, and in politics was first an
old-line Abolitionist and after a Republican. During the early part of his life he taught
school for some time. His father, Joseph Eaton, died in Licking County, Ohio, where he had
farmed for many years. He was of English descent and his people came to this country over
200 years ago. Zarah Curtis, the maternal grandfather, who was born in New England, but
was an early settler in Licking County, Ohio, was a farmer by occupation, and a minister of
the Methodist Church for many years. He was one of the first to preach Methodism in the
United States, and was a very eminent evangelist and an able expounder of the Scriptures.
He was the father of the distinguished Federal general, S. R. Curtis, who commanded the
army of the Southwest during the Civil War. Zarah A. Eaton was the fifth of ten children
born to his parents: Alvin, of Kansas; Marcutia died in Illinois, the wife of Henry Smith;
Judson died in Peoria, Ill., in 1849; Orsemus died in 1849; Zarah A.; Samuel resides in
Kansas; James resides in Kansas; Henry is a resident of Ripley County, Mo.; Sarah died in
Kansas, the wife of Samuel H. Wright; and Amanda is the widow of a Mr. Hazelbeck, of Illinois.
Although Zarah A. Eaton's father was a school teacher, his (Zarah's) education was very
much neglected, and his early life was spent on the frontier of Illinois. When quite young
he developed considerable taste for hunting, and one day, when about fourteen years old,
while following his favorite pursuit, came upon a drove of deer. He at once took aim but
his gun would not fire. He made several attempts with the same result each time, and becoming
disgusted he gave up trying and turned his thoughts to other matters. He began thinking of
his lack of education, and then and there formed a determination to supply this deficiency.
He revolved a plan in his busy brain, and upon his return home laid the matter before his
elder brothers, and he soon won them to consent to his plan. They built a rude cabin on
the farm, apart from the family residence, to which they repaired daily with their books, and
each was teacher and pupil. By their united and continued efforts they in time became masters
of the situation, and obtained good practical, common educations in this novel way. In
1856 Mr. Eaton was married in Peoria County, Ill., to Elizabeth, daughter of Henry Wright.
She was born in New York, and died in Varner, Mo., in 1890, the mother of four children:
Cora, wife of William Bontz, of New Mexico; Hattie H., wife of William Hauk, of Peoria, Ill.,
Viola; and Thaddeus, of Doniphan, Mo. Mr. Eaton lived for about five years in Neosho
County, Kan., but returned to Illinois, and in 1885 came to Varner, Mo., where he has
since made his home. He has been engaged in the timber business in one way or another
nearly all his life, and is now engaged in handling ties and other timber. During his last
residence in Illinois he operated a coal mine. He was once assessor of Peoria County, and
was once county judge of Neosho County, Kan. Socially he is a member of Faithful Lodge No.
304, of the A.F. & A.M., at Fairdealing, and though formerly a Democrat in politics, and
cast his first presidential vote for Pierce in 1852, he is now a stanch Republican. He
is a shrewd, yet always honorable business man, and his success is due to his own efforts.
Additional Comments:
Extracted from:
A REMINISCENT HISTORY OF THE OZARK REGION
COMPRISING A CONDENSED GENERAL HISTORY, A BRIEF DESCRIPTIVE HISTORY OF EACH
COUNTY, AND NUMEROUS BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES OF PROMINENT CITIZENS OF SUCH
COUNTIES. pp 727-728
ILLUSTRATED.
CHICAGO: GOODSPEED BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS. 1894.
File at: http://ftp.usgenweb.com/pub/usgenweb/mo/ripley/bios/eaton_zarah
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File contributed for use in USGenWeb by:
Peggy Cannady pcannady6@gmail.com June 14, 2009
Author: Goodspeed Brothers (1894)
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