Hamilton County Biographies Project
 
 
 George W. Yancey - Hamilton County, Ohio
Biography from "History of Cincinnati and Hamilton County, Ohio; their past and
present, ...". Cincinnati, Ohio; S.B. Nelson Co., Publishers; 1894

"George Washington Yancey, ticket agent and telegraph operator at North Bend station. C.C.C. & St. L.R.R., was born near North Bend, Miami township, the elder of two children who blessed the union of Joseph and Ruth (Bump) Yancey.  He was educated in the public schools of North Bend, and since leaving school has been a telegraph operator, receiving his appointment to his present position
with the C.C.C. & L.R.R. in 1888. Mr. Yancey was married, in December, 1889, to
Bertha, daughter of Joseph Hunt, whose parents were natives of Miami township, and to this union have been born two children, named Clifford and Joseph, both of whom survive.

The parents of our subject are both natives of Miami township. The father is a
prosperous farmer at Worthington, Ind., where they now reside. The sister of our subject, Mollie, is the wife of Edward Piggs, residing at Worthington, Ind. Mr. Yancey is a member of the Sons of Veterans."
 

Submitted by Phil Yancey
November 20, 1999
 

 
 
AN ILLUSTRATED HISTORY OF THE STATE OF INDIANA
Richard S. Peale & Co., Publishers, 1875
Page 667-668
 
HARVEY BATES
 
        Harvey Bates,one of the oldest pioneers of Indianapolis now living, was born at Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1795. When but four years of age his mother died leaving a family of four children all in tender years. The children were "put out" among friends. The parties with whom the subject of this sketch was intrusted moved to Lebanon, Warren county, Ohio, where he remained doing general farm work until he was fifteen years of age. At this age he went into a store in that place, owned by the postmaster. He had the full care of the postoffice until he was about twenty-one years of age.  During his youth his educational advantages were limited. In other words he received only the education afforded in the pioneer country schools. At this age Mr. Bates bought out his employer and commenced merchandizing on his own account. In 1816 he moved to Brookville, Ind., and opened a store there. Soon after he cast his first vote for delegates to the
constitutional convention of 1816. He remained only a short time in Brookville, when he moved to Connersville, where he erected a carding mill and fulling mill, in which he carried on a successful business for about ten years. He sold out his interest in this mill, and in 1822 came to what is now Indianapolis, then a wilderness, commissioned by Gov. Jennings as sheriff to assist in organizing the county of Marion. From that date he was resided continually in Indianapolis, and has been one of its most useful and successful citizens.
 
File contributed & permission given for use in the Ohio Biographies Project
by Maggie Stewart-Zimmerman <73777.25@compuserve.com> & the submitter
From the
The OHGenWeb Archives
http://www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/oh/ohfiles.htm
a part of
The USGenWeb Archives
http://www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/
********************************************
File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by
MRS GINA M REASONER
AUPQ38A@prodigy.com
28 September 1999
 
  
 
 
AN ILLUSTRATED HISTORY OF THE STATE OF INDIANA
Richard S. Peale & Co., Publishers, 1875
Page 645
REV. JAMES THOMPSON
        He is another of the old pioneers of Crawfordsville; was born in Hamilton county, Ohio, in the year 1801. He graduated at the Miami University of Oxford, Ohio, in 1825, and moved to Montgomery county in 1828. He was the first regular Presbyterian preacher in Crawfordsville, and was instrumental in promoting the growth of Wabash College. He removed to Wabash, where he preached with great success for five years; after which he returned to Crawfordsville. In 1853 he moved to Mankato, Minn., where he preached for fifteen years. He died in October, 1873, and his remains were brought back to Crawfordsville and deposited in Mill's cemetery. His name is fresh and precious in the memory of the people of Montgomery county, as also among those who have met with him in Minnesota.
 
Submitted by File contributed & permission given for use in the Ohio Biographies Project
by Maggie Stewart-Zimmerman <73777.25@compuserve.com> & the submitter
From the
The OHGenWeb Archives
http://www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/oh/ohfiles.htm
a part of
The USGenWeb Archives
http://www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/
********************************************
File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by
MRS GINA M REASONER
AUPQ38A@prodigy.com
28 September 1999
 

 
"The History of Montgomery County, Ohio" by W.H. Beers & Co.  1882
 

Robert Young Chambers, deceased, was born in Parish Kyle, Queens County, Ireland, May 8, 1808.  At the age of twenty-two years he left home via Dublin for Liverpool, from which point he sailed for America on May 14, 1830, in th ship
William and John, of West Florida.  He landed in New York July 7, 1830, and
started at once for the West, stopping first at Braddock's Field, Penn., where
he remained for a short time, but was induced to go on to Cincinnati, where he
arrived December 2, 1830.  He did not stop at Cincinnati, but pushed on by stage to Dayton, where he arrived on the 9th of December, 1830.  He first obtained employment as foreman in the pork packing establishment of _____ Davie.  In this capacity he continued until he took command of the canal-boat Messenger
for the same firm, which then occupied the south-west corner of the canal basin.
He remained in their employ until their failure, when he obtained a similar
position of one Ritchie.  About this time, June 8, 1836, he was married in St.
Peter's Church, Cincinnati,to Miss Eliza Mullin, of Cincinnati, formerly of County Antrim, Ireland.  In 1838, he removed with his family to Dayton, where he accepted a position with the late Alexander Simms in the grocery firm of Simms & Sayrs, in which he soon obtained an interest, and continued the business under the firm name of Chambers, Simms & Sayres.  He afterward, by a succession of changes, became, in 1845, the senior member of the firm of Chambers & Harris, with Mr. John Harris.  They purchased at the same time the competition business of Esterbrook & Phelps, who had purchased the established business of Reach, Emdie & Co.  Chambers & Harris then controlled two of the largest commisiion houses in Dayton for eleven years, at the expiration of which time they dissolved their partnership relations, and Mr. Chambers built the bulding known to old residents as the "factory", and established "Chambers' Line", and independent line of canal packets running from Cincinnati to Toledo.  About this time, he suffered a loss by fire, which consumed his building, but he built again on the old site what is known as Chambers' Warehouse.  His business began to assume large proportions, and his boats became such a source of anxiety to the Sandusky Railroad Company (the first road here), that they made repeated proposals to buy them, but their offers were refused, and he continued in his ever-increasing busineess until his retirement in 1873, after nearly half a century spent in the most active business.  He left his business to his son, John M., and Mr. M.W. Chambers, and paid a visit to the haunts of childhood in his native land, only to find his friends and relatives gone.  He died May, 1876, aged just sixty-six years, leaving a host of mourning friends behind.  His life, spent in honest activity, was not sullied by a single stain.  He was a  consistent communicant of the Catholic Church, but his charities extended to all denominations.  At his death, his family of nine children had dwindled to five-one son, who died in 1879, and four daughters, who still occupy th old homestead on East Second street.
 

 
Submitted by Tina Hursh.
 

 
From CENTENNIAL HISTORY OF GRANT COUNTY INDIANA 1812-1912
The Lewis Publishing Company, 1914
Page 162-1263
 

        ERNEST G. ZIMMER, M.D.  A worthy representative of the medical profession in Grant County, is Dr. Ernest G. Zimmer, who for the past fourteen years has been located at Upland, and whose professional work began more than a quarter of a century ago. Both by his personal character and his technical ability he has dignified his calling, and has won a prestige by which he well merits recognition in this volume of Grant county biography. Dr. Zimmer is a graduate of the Cincinnati School of Medicine and Surgery, with the class of 1886. Soon after leaving medical college he established himself in practice at Santa Fe, Miami county, Indiana, and was in active practice there, until 1899. Then, following a course at the Chicago Polyclinic, he located at Upland, where he has built up a
representative clientage and is recognized as one of the leaders of his profession.
        Dr. Zimmer was born at Cincinnati, Ohio in 1858. His early advantages after the common schools were secured largely through his own work with an ambition definitely fixed upon a professional career. He was a student in the normal school at Lebanon, Ohio, and spent two years in the medical department of the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, and later graduated with the degree of M.D. at the Cincinnati School of Medicine and Surgery. His father, George Zimmer, had a noteworthy career as a German immigrant to America. Born in Baden, Germany, he was of a good family, and many of its members gained distinction both in military and civic life. He was reared in his land, where he learned the trade of a baker, and then in the revolutionary activities of the late forties he found himself a patriot on the side of the rebels. His uncle, General Wiler, of the German Army, advised young George to flee from his native country and use all secrecy in making his escape, leaving by night, otherwise he would pay forfeit of his life for his rebellion. He escaped from Baden and became a stowaway on a sailing vessel bound for the United States. Arriving in the City of New york without a penny, he begged a loaf of bread, and that was his only food
for three days, while in the meantime he spent three nights in a deserted church. At the end of that time he found work at three dollars a week, and finally drifted west to Cincinnati. Within a few years he had saved money enough to send for his sweetheart, whom he had left behind in Germany. Her name was Catherine Sutter, who was born in the same town as George Zimmer.  After her arrival in the United States they were married, and started out to make their fortunes. As a baker Mr. Zimmer found regular employment in different places, and finally, with a capital of four hundred dollars, he went to Keokuk, Iowa, during the boom in that city, and invested all his savings in real estate. The boom collapsed, and all his surplus was thus swept away. With his wife and baby, Ernest G., he had to work his way back to Cincinnati, stopping at St. Louis a brief time, and then on to their destination. He soon afterward located at St. Paris, Ohio, where he was
engaged in business for himself and lived until his death in 1893. He was born in 1827. His wife was born in 1830, and passed away in 1906. In her native land she had been a school teacher, and throughout her life kept up on current literature. She was a woman of unusual powers of mind and character. Both were members of the Evangelical church in Germany, and in this country worshipped in the Lutheran faith. On first coming to America, George Zimmer espoused the principles of the Whig party, and afterward was a staunch adherent of the principles of the Republican party. Mr. and Mrs. Zimmer were the parents of eight children, six of whom grew to maturity and are still living and four of these are married and have children of their own. Frank A. is a prominent lawyer in Urbana, Ohio and has one son.  Emanuel R. is a dentist engaged in practice in Greenville, Missouri and has one daughter. Fritz is unmarried, being a baker by trade, and also lives in Greenville, Missouri. Mrs. Mary Mitchell, who for a number of years was a successful teacher at St. Paris, Ohio. Dr. Zimmer, the oldest of the children, was married in Ohio to Miss Eva Cook. Detroit, Michigan was her birthplace, and she received superior educational advantages in different places, chiefly in Chester county, Pennsylvania, near the home of Bayard Taylor. Dr. Zimmer and wife, have one daughter, a talented young woman who is well known in Grant county, Miss Edna George Zimmer, who resides with
her parents. She was educated in the Upland public schools and Taylor
University. She early showed talent as a musician, and by study at home and
under excellent instructors has become very proficient as a violinist and is now a member of the faculty of the Marion Conservatory of Music. Dr. Zimmer is affiliated with the Masonic order and the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, and his politics is Republican.

 
 

Contributed to the Hamilton Co., OH Biographies Project with permission of the
OH-FOOTSTEPS Mailing list coordinator (Maggie
Stewart-Zimmerman<73777.25@compuserve.com>) and the submitter.
***********************************************************
File contributed to OH-FOOTSTEPS Mailing List by:
Mrs. Gina M. Reasoner
AUPQ38a@prodigy.com
23 July 1999.
 
 
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