1830 - 1881 (51 years)
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Name |
Emily Allen [1, 2, 4, 6] |
Birth |
13 Feb 1830 |
Milo, Yates, New York, USA [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6] |
Gender |
Female |
Residence |
1860 |
Hudson, Lenawee, Michigan, USA [2] |
Residence |
1880 |
Hudson, Lenawee, Michigan, USA [1] |
- Occupation: Housekeeper; Marital Status: Married; Relation to Head of House: Wife
|
Death |
25 Apr 1881 |
Hudson, Lenawee, Michigan, USA [3, 4, 6] |
Burial |
Hudson, Lenawee, Michigan, USA [3] |
Person ID |
I5392 |
Master |
Last Modified |
18 Jul 2024 |
Father |
Robert Allen, b. 1805, , , New York, USA d. Yes, date unknown, , Hillsdale, Michigan, USA |
Family ID |
F1995 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
Family |
John Viele Munger, b. 17 Jul 1829, Stillwater, Saratoga, New York, USA d. 26 Jul 1900, Hudson, Lenawee, Michigan, USA (Age 71 years) |
Marriage |
21 Apr 1855 [7] |
Children |
+ | 1. Edith M Munger, b. 1 Jan 1861, Hudson, Lenawee, Michigan, USA d. 2 Mar 1945, Adrian, Lenawee, Michigan, USA (Age 84 years) |
|
Family ID |
F1919 |
Group Sheet | Family Chart |
Last Modified |
7 Jul 2015 |
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Event Map |
|
| Birth - 13 Feb 1830 - Milo, Yates, New York, USA |
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| Residence - 1860 - Hudson, Lenawee, Michigan, USA |
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| Residence - 1880 - Hudson, Lenawee, Michigan, USA |
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| Death - 25 Apr 1881 - Hudson, Lenawee, Michigan, USA |
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| Burial - - Hudson, Lenawee, Michigan, USA |
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Sources |
- [S230] Ancestry.com and The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 1880 United States Federal Census, (Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2010.).
- [S31] Ancestry.com, 1860 United States Federal Census, (Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2009. Images reproduced by FamilySearch.).
- [S751] Ancestry.com, U.S., Find a GraveĀ® Index, 1600s-Current, (Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.).
- [S923] Ancestry.com, Michigan, U.S., Death Records, 1867-1952, (Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.), Michigan Department of Community Health, Division for Vital Records and Health Statistics; Lansing, Michigan; Death Records.
- [S923] Ancestry.com, Michigan, U.S., Death Records, 1867-1952, (Ancestry.com Operations, Inc.).
- [S130] Chapman Brothers, Portrait and biographical album of Lenawee County, Mich. 816-817, (Chicago: Chapman Brothers, 1888), 816-817 (Reliability: 2).
JOHN VELIE MUNGER, a prominent and
well-to-do farmer of Hudson Township, was
born at Stillwater, Saratoga Co., N.Y.,
July 17, 1829. He is a son of John and
Maria (Velie) Munger, both of whom were natives
of the Empire State, and pioneers of the wilds of
Michigan, having come to this State when it was
yet a Territory, in 1835.
The father of the subject of this sketch was born
in Saratoga County, N. Y., May 26, 1796, while
yet that part of the State was but sparsely settled
and largely covered with primeval forests. When
he was some four years old, the family removed to
Erie County. Pa., where they made their home un-
til 1835. at which time his father started for the
Territory of Michigan, where he hoped to build up
a new home in the wilderness. He was accompanied
by his wife and eight children, including our sub-
ject, and came by way of the lake to Toledo,
Ohio. On arriving at the latter place, he left his
family and started on foot for his future home in
Hillsdale County. He had visited the Bean Creek
Valley the year previous, and had entered some
Government land on section 36 in what is now
Pittsford Township. On his arrival in Hillsdale
County, he procured a yoke of oxen and a cart,
and returning to Toledo for his family and house
hold goods, brought them to their new home. His
land at that time was thickly covered by the for-
est that had grown and luxuriated for centuries
undisturbed. Knowing that it would take some
time to clear enough of it to raise a crop to sup-
port his family, he rented a tract of improved land,
on which they lived for that year. During this
time he disencumbered a portion of his own place
of its leafy covering, and prepared the land for
cultivation. Putting up a log cabin in 1836 he
therein installed his family, and entering upon the
arduous duties of a frontier farmer patiently
endured the hardships and privations attendant on a
pioneer life.
On this farm, which he had literally hewn out of
the forest, the father resided until 1855, when he
sold out and removed to Amboy Township, Lee
Co., Ill., where he purchased 160 acres of prairie
land of the Government, and commenced to break
up a new farm, but two years later was called upon
by the Angel of death to cross the dark river. His
wife, who was before marriage Miss Maria Velie,
was also a native of Stillwater, Saratoga Co., N. Y.,
and first drew the breath of life on the 25th of
May. 1804; she died in Amboy, Ill., in 1875
John V. Munger, the subject of this sketch, was
but six years oid when he came to Michigan with
his parents, and is a living witness of the great
changes that have taken place since his early days.
The deer, wolves, beers and wild turkeys that were
so plentiful here in his boyhood, have entirely van-
ished, and the forest wilderness has given place to
beautiful farms and thrifty towns and villages. He
remained beneath the parental roof, attending the
pioneer schools and assisting his father in his agri-
cultural labors, until he was some nineteen years
old, when he commenced an apprenticeship to the
trade of carpenter and joiner. Having completed
that trade, he has followed it ever since, with the
exception of about ten years, when he was engaged
in the manufacture of extension tables. In 1855
he removed to the village of Hudson, and purchas-
ing a house on West Main street, took up his resi-
dence therein, and remained there until 1876, when
he moved into a fine brick mansion which he had
just erected. He made this latter house his home
until February, 1888, when he commenced agricult-
ural pursuits upon the Kenyon farm, where he is
now living.
The subject of this sketch has been twice married.
April 21. 1855, he entered into a matrimonial
alliance with Miss Emily Allen, a native of Seneca
County, N.Y., and the daughter of Robert Allen,
also a Native of the Empire State. Her parents had
settled in Hillsdale County in 1855, locating in
Jefferson Township on a farm, and sometime sub-
sequently removed to Reading Township, where
they died. Mrs. Munger was called away by death
April 25, 1881, leaving one child, Edith, now the
now the wife of Lewis Graham of Wheatland Township.
The second marriage of Mr. Munger took place
May 10, 1882, at which time he espoused Miss
Louise M. Kenyon. She is a native of this township
and county, having been born on the farm where
she now lives Feb. 15, 1840, and is a daughter of
Sylvester and Eliza (Goodrich) Kenyon. Her
father was one of the earliest settlers of Hudson
Township, having located here in 1834. He was
born in Hinesburg, Vt., Dec, 4, 1808, and grew to
manhood among the green hills and valleys of his
native state. May 11, 1834, he was united in marriage
with Miss Eliza, a daughter of George and
Clamania (Lee) Goodrich, who was born in Williston,
Vt., Feb. 22, 1814. On the 14th of May fol-
lowing his marriage. Sylvester Kenyon started with
his young bride for the West, to seek in the wilderness
a new home. He came by way of the Erie
Canal and the Lake to Detroit, and thence by team
to Tecumseh, Lenawee County. Arriving at the em-
bryo village, he left his wife and started on foot for
the Bean Creek Valley, and found at Lanesville,
now Hudson, but one log cabin, then occupied by
Beriah Lane. Mr. Kenyon purchased a tract of
land of Mr. Lane, adjoining the present site of the
village, but after paying for it, he had but a few
shillings left in his pocket, and therefore returned
to Tecumseh, and worked on the territorial road to
earn money enough to carry them through the winter.
Before the snow began to fly, Mr. K. removed
to his place, where he had erected a log cabin, and
during the winter felled some of the timber that
covered the ground. The next season he raised a
crop of corn and potatoes among the logs and
stumps, which he had not yet time to destroy.
After bringing his place to a high state of cultiva-
tion, he remained upon it until his death, which
occured March 29, 1879. Mrs. Eliza (Goodrich)
Kenyon died Dec. 24, 1879, nine months after the
death of her husband. They left three children,
the eldest, Mrs. G.G. Williams, now a resident of
Vanderbilt, Otsego Co., Mich., but still owning the
east half of the Kenyon homestead; Mrs. J.V.
Munger, of Hudson, and Mr. Martin Kenyon, now
a resident of Pittsford, Hillsdale Co., Mich.
Mrs. Kenyon died on the homestead. Mrs. Clamania
Goodrich was born in Wells, Vt., June 16, 1790, and
after her marriage settled with her husband at
Williston, where they remained until 1836. At that time
they started for the Territory of Michigan,
by way of Lake Champlain to Troy, N.Y.,
and from there by Erie Canal and the Lake to
Toledo. From the latter place they proceeded by
team to Pittsford Township in Hillsdale County,
where they settled upon a farm, where her husband
died June 2, 1850. Mrs. Goodrich died on the
old homestead, Dec. 13, 1863.
- [S130] Chapman Brothers, Portrait and biographical album of Lenawee County, Mich. 816-817, (Chicago: Chapman Brothers, 1888), 816-817 (Reliability: 3).
JOHN VELIE MUNGER, a prominent and well-to-do farmer of Hudson Township, was born at Stillwater, Saratoga Co., N.Y., July 17, 1829. He is a son of John and Maria (Velie) Munger, both of whom were natives of the Empire State, and pioneers of the wilds of
Michigan, having come to this State when it wasyet a Territory, in 1835.
The father of the subject of this sketch was born in Saratoga County, N. Y., May 26, 1796, while yet that part of the State was but sparsely settled and largely covered with primeval forests. When he was some four years old, the family removed to Erie County. Pa., where they made their home until 1835. at which time his father started for the Territory of Michigan, where he hoped to build up a new home in the wilderness. He was accompanied by his wife and eight children, including our subject, and came by way of the lake to Toledo, Ohio. On arriving at the latter place, he left his family and started on foot for his future home in Hillsdale County. He had visited the Bean Creek Valley the year previous, and had entered some Government land on section 36 in what is now Pittsford Township. On his arrival in Hillsdale County, he procured a yoke of oxen and a cart, and returning to Toledo for his family and house hold goods, brought them to their new home. His land at that time was thickly covered by the forest that had grown and luxuriated for centuries undisturbed. Knowing that it would take some time to clear enough of it to raise a crop to support his family, he rented a tract of improved land, on which they lived for that year. During this time he disencumbered a portion of his own place of its leafy covering, and prepared the land for cultivation. Putting up a log cabin in 1836 he therein installed his family, and entering upon the arduous duties of a frontier farmer patiently endured the hardships and privations attendant on a pioneer life.
On this farm, which he had literally hewn out of the forest, the father resided until 1855, when he sold out and removed to Amboy Township, Lee Co., Ill., where he purchased 160 acres of prairie land of the Government, and commenced to break up a new farm, but two years later was called upon by the Angel of death to cross the dark river. His wife, who was before marriage Miss Maria Velie, was also a native of Stillwater, Saratoga Co., N. Y., and first drew the breath of life on the 25th of May. 1804; she died in Amboy, Ill., in 1875.
John V. Munger, the subject of this sketch, was but six years oid when he came to Michigan with his parents, and is a living witness of the great changes that have taken place since his early days. The deer, wolves, beers and wild turkeys that were
so plentiful here in his boyhood, have entirely vanished, and the forest wilderness has given place to beautiful farms and thrifty towns and villages. He remained beneath the parental roof, attending the pioneer schools and assisting his father in his agricultural labors, until he was some nineteen years old, when he commenced an apprenticeship to the trade of carpenter and joiner. Having completed that trade, he has followed it ever since, with the exception of about ten years, when he was engaged in the manufacture of extension tables. In 1855 he removed to the village of Hudson, and purchasing a house on West Main street, took up his residence therein, and remained there until 1876, when he moved into a fine brick mansion which he had
just erected. He made this latter house his home until February, 1888, when he commenced agricultural pursuits upon the Kenyon farm, where he is now living.
The subject of this sketch has been twice married. April 21. 1855, he entered into a matrimonial alliance with Miss Emily Allen, a native of Seneca County, N.Y., and the daughter of Robert Allen, also a Native of the Empire State. Her parents had settled in Hillsdale County in 1855, locating in Jefferson Township on a farm, and sometime subsequently removed to Reading Township, where they died. Mrs. Munger was called away by death April 25, 1881, leaving one child, Edith, now the now the wife of Lewis Graham of Wheatland Township. The second marriage of Mr. Munger took place May 10, 1882, at which time he espoused Miss Louise M. Kenyon. She is a native of this township and county, having been born on the farm where she now lives Feb. 15, 1840, and is a daughter of Sylvester and Eliza (Goodrich) Kenyon. Her father was one of the earliest settlers of Hudson Township, having located here in 1834. He was born in Hinesburg, Vt., Dec, 4, 1808, and grew to manhood among the green hills and valleys of his native state. May 11, 1834, he was united in marriage with Miss Eliza, a daughter of George and Clamania (Lee) Goodrich, who was born in Williston, Vt., Feb. 22, 1814. On the 14th of May following his marriage. Sylvester Kenyon started with his young bride for the West, to seek in the wilderness a new home. He came by way of the Erie Canal and the Lake to Detroit, and thence by team to Tecumseh, Lenawee County. Arriving at the embryo village, he left his wife and started on foot for the Bean Creek Valley, and found at Lanesville, now Hudson, but one log cabin, then occupied by Beriah Lane. Mr. Kenyon purchased a tract of land of Mr. Lane, adjoining the present site of the village, but after paying for it, he had but a few
shillings left in his pocket, and therefore returned to Tecumseh, and worked on the territorial road to earn money enough to carry them through the winter.
Before the snow began to fly, Mr. K. removed to his place, where he had erected a log cabin, and during the winter felled some of the timber that covered the ground. The next season he raised a crop of corn and potatoes among the logs and stumps, which he had not yet time to destroy. After bringing his place to a high state of cultivation, he remained upon it until his death, which occured March 29, 1879. Mrs. Eliza (Goodrich) Kenyon died Dec. 24, 1879, nine months after the death of her husband. They left three children, the eldest, Mrs. G.G. Williams, now a resident of Vanderbilt, Otsego Co., Mich., but still owning the east half of the Kenyon homestead; Mrs. J.V. Munger, of Hudson, and Mr. Martin Kenyon, now a resident of Pittsford, Hillsdale Co., Mich.
Mrs. Kenyon died on the homestead. Mrs. Clamania Goodrich was born in Wells, Vt., June 16, 1790, and after her marriage settled with her husband at Williston, where they remained until 1836. At that time they started for the Territory of Michigan, by way of Lake Champlain to Troy, N.Y., and from there by Erie Canal and the Lake to
Toledo. From the latter place they proceeded by team to Pittsford Township in Hillsdale County, where they settled upon a farm, where her husband died June 2, 1850. Mrs. Goodrich died on the old homestead, Dec. 13, 1863.
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