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Ida County Iowa Biographies

These Ida County Biographies have been provided by Conley Wolterman, if you would like to request additional information, just click on her name.

 

Hector Baxter

        Hector Baxter, a farmer of Maple Township, Ida County, Iowa, was born in Argyleshire, Scotland, June 16, 1834.  His parents were John and Mary (McNeil) Baxter, natives also of that country where they lived and died.
        Hector was reared and educated in Scotland where he learned and followed the trade of shoemaker for many years.  In 1877, he left his native land for the United States, and after landing in New York, purchased and improved 160 acres of wild land in Tama County, Iowa.  He sold this land in 1881, and bought 320 acres in Ida County.  He built a two-story, eight-room house, along with a barn.  He engaged in farming and stock-raising, making a specialty of shorthorn cattle.
        He was married at the age of 25 years to Margaret Stuart, a daughter of John and Helen (Cockburn) Stuart of Scotland.  Mr. And Mrs. Baxter had seven children, namely:  Nellie (wife of Dr. F. B. Warnock), John, James, William, Mary, Hector M. and Stuart.

 

John H. Moorehead

        J. H. Moorehead came to Ida County in June, 1856.  He was born in Zanesville, Ohio, September 21, 1808.  He was a son of Thomas Moorehead who was of Scotch ancestry.  He had been engaged in shipping flour down the Ohio and Mississippi rivers to New Orleans.  In 1854, Mr. Moorehead came to Iowa City, Iowa, where he remained until 1856, when he and his family came to Ida County.    He took an active part in all public affairs and assisted in the upbuilding of the county.  He had been a man of business for many years and shouldered the public duties which were thrust upon him.  When the Ida County government was organized in 1858, he was chosen as County Judge. By this time, there were 38 people residing in the county.  The county courthouse was established at his home in 1860.  The first post office of the county was also at the Moorehead Homestead by 1857, and stagecoaches traveled daily from Fort Dodge to Sioux City, and back.  Mrs. Moorehead prepared meals for the riders of the stagecoaches, and travelers could room there, also.
    
 When John Moorehead came to Ida County, he made his residence in the grove near where the town of Ida Grove was later established in 1877.  When they first arrived in the county, they lived in a trapper’s cabin near where the Timber Creek and the Maple River joined, until their log cabin had been built nearby.  The log cabin had one room downstairs and an upstairs for the men and boys.  The family brought Mrs. Moorehead’s mother with them, along with a hired girl.  This thriving place became the Moorehead homestead, and was christened Ida Grove by Mrs. Martha Moorehead.  Martha was the daughter of John A. and Mary A. Good of Martinsburg, Virginia and was born July 6, 1814.
    
 J. H. helped plat and lay out the Village of Ida, and on April 13, 1871, the plat was recorded.  Here the village was built, and after the appearance of the railroad in 1877, the new town of Ida Grove was platted.  Many of the businesses were moved from the Village of Ida to the location of the new town built beside the railroad tracks.  It new town was named Ida Grove, the same as the Moorehead homestead. 
      John and Martha had five children:  Anna L. (the wife of Rev. Dr. Woodworth), William C., Hammond A., Frank R., and Giles C. (the first white boy born in Ida County on November 2, 1856).  Giles was reared on the old home place and received his early education in the schools of the district and at Sioux City, Iowa.  He graduated from the medical department of the State University of Iowa on March 5, 1875.  He located at Ida Grove and setup medical practice there.  He made a specialty of diseases of the eye.

 

George Yousling

        George Yousling of Corwin Township, Ida County, Iowa, settled here in 1879 on Section 26.  He was born in Harrisburg, Dauphin County, Pa., October 28, 1825, the son of George Yousling, Sr., a native of Switzerland.  His mother was Elizabeth Yousling, also a native of Switzerland.
        George Yousling was reared and educated in Dauphin County, living there until 18 years of age where he learned the trade of carpenter.  His present farm was south of Ida Grove where he redeemed the farm from its original wild state.  His residence was two stories in height, with an added L the same height.  His commodious barn was 38 x 50 feet, with twelve-foot posts and twenty-six foot center post on a rock foundation.  He had a crib building and a wagon shed, along with an implement building.  The farm was well watered with fine wells and a good pond.  The farm of 400 acres was divided into fields, well fenced, and had a nice grove. 
        George married when he was twenty-four years of age with Eleanor Young of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.  Her parents were John and Lydia Young.  Three children were born to Mr. & Mrs. Yousling, namely:  John, and another son and daughter died in childhood.  Mrs. Yousling died in 1852 and two years later George again married,  to Mary McFadden.  Six children were born to them, namely:  William, Barbara, Joseph R., George H., Ella, and Ed.
        Mr. Yousling served in the Civil War for nine months, belonging to Company K, 192 Regiment. 

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