Abner SLOSSON

Abner SLOSSON

Male 1800 - 1877  (76 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Abner SLOSSONAbner SLOSSON was born on 17 Oct 1800 in Greenville, Greene County, New York; died on 21 May 1877 in Northwood, Worth County, Iowa; was buried in State Line Cemetery, Grove, Worth County, Iowa.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Census: 1850, Living in Maine, Broome Co., New York
    • Occupation: 1850; Farmer
    • Census: 1860, Living in Maine, Broome Co., New York
    • Occupation: 1860; Farmer

    Notes:

    "George Slawson: An American Pioneer" by Harold D. Slosson: Abner was getting older, and in that day of early marriages was probably called an old bachelor by his friends. Finally, at the age of thirty-three, he had a romance with a local girl, being married on March 14, 1833, to Nancy Marean. the years likewise had been moving by for Nancy, who was two years older than Abner, having been born on July 11, 1798, the daughter of Thomas and Esther (Patterson) Marean.
    Nancy's folks - The Pattersons and the Mareans - were pioneers in that area, having arrived in 1786, the year after Binghampton was founded. At the time of their arrival, according to old notes, there were only four houses in that area.....
    Abner's home at Newark Valley was only about a dozen miles from these commercially promising cities. But he did not feel the urge to join them in their growth. Rather, he and Nancy, after marriage, moved a short way to the east to another small village called Maine, just over the line in Broome County. He has been handed down to the writer that Abner's farm was a good one. Also, that it was close in, being only a mile from the village.
    Nancy and Abner had three children, born and raised on their farm, as follows: John Marean Slosson, born March 29, 1835, ...;Rebecca Emily Slosson, born the next year, was later married to Eldad Barber; and finally came Albert Slosson, born in 1838, who never married.
    The Abner Slossons, as near as is known, had a successful but rather uneventful life on their farm, probably helping with church and community affairs. finally, on March 2, 1865 - just a month before the close of the Civil War - Nancy passed on. Shortly afterward Abner sold his farm, as did his son, Albert, and then, together with Abner's daughter Rebecca Barber, they moved west to Northwood, Iowa, to be with Abner's first-born son, John Marean Slosson, already established there.
    It is believed that this change in location was in the nature of a retirement, "moving to town." Finally, in 1877, at the age of seventy-seven years, Abner passed on to his reward. His son, Albert, lived until 1904, with his sister, Rebecca, having passed away sometime after her marriage to Eldad Barber in 1883.

    Abner married Nancy MAREAN on 14 Mar 1833 in Northwood, Worth County, Iowa. Nancy (daughter of Thomas MAREAN and Esther PATTERSON) was born on 11 Jul 1798 in Union, New York; died on 02 Mar 1865 in Maine, Broome County, New York; was buried in Maine Village Cemetery, Maine Broome Co., New York. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 2. Albert SLOSSON  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 10 Apr 1838 in Maine, Broome County, New York; died on 16 Jul 1905 in Grove,Worth County, Iowa; was buried in State Line Cemetery, Grove, Worth County, Iowa.
    2. 3. Rebecca Emily SLOSSON  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 17 May 1836 in Maine, Broome County, New York; died on 14 Mar 1891 in Northwood, Worth County, Iowa; was buried in Stateline Cemetery, Northwood, Worth Co., Iowa.
    3. 4. John Marean SLOSSON  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 29 Mar 1835 in Maine, Broome County, New York; died on 28 Mar 1900 in Grove,Worth County, Iowa; was buried in State Line Cemetery, Grove, Worth County, Iowa.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Albert SLOSSON Descendancy chart to this point (1.Abner1) was born on 10 Apr 1838 in Maine, Broome County, New York; died on 16 Jul 1905 in Grove,Worth County, Iowa; was buried in State Line Cemetery, Grove, Worth County, Iowa.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Census: 1850, Living with parents in Maine, Broome Co., New York
    • Census: 1860, Living with parents in Maine, Broome Co., New York
    • Census: 1880, Living in Northwood, Worth Co., Iowa
    • Occupation: 1880; Farmer


  2. 3.  Rebecca Emily SLOSSONRebecca Emily SLOSSON Descendancy chart to this point (1.Abner1) was born on 17 May 1836 in Maine, Broome County, New York; died on 14 Mar 1891 in Northwood, Worth County, Iowa; was buried in Stateline Cemetery, Northwood, Worth Co., Iowa.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Census: 1850, Living with parents in Maine, Broome Co., New York
    • Census: 1860, Living with parents in Maine, Broome Co., New York
    • Census: 1880, Living with brother in Northwood, Worth Co., Iowa
    • Death: 1891, Northwood, Worth County, Iowa

    Rebecca married Eldad BARBER on 01 Jan 1883 in Worth County, Iowa. Eldad was born in 1835; died on 18 Sep 1894 in Worth County, Iowa; was buried in State Line cemetery, Worth Co., Iowa. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  3. 4.  John Marean SLOSSON Descendancy chart to this point (1.Abner1) was born on 29 Mar 1835 in Maine, Broome County, New York; died on 28 Mar 1900 in Grove,Worth County, Iowa; was buried in State Line Cemetery, Grove, Worth County, Iowa.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Census: 1850, Living with parents in Maine, Broome Co., New York
    • Census: 1880, living in Kensett Twp., Worth Co., Iowa
    • Occupation: 1880; Farmer

    Notes:

    "George Slawson: An American Pioneer", by Harold D Slosson: John was the New York school teacher who in 1859 took his bride Roxy Jane, across the country - partway in a covered wagon - to Northwood, Iowa. There, while raising their family, the Slossons struggled to subdue a large farm on the prairie....
    At this particular time, 1856, there was offered by the United States government to its citizens an opportunity to preempt land in southeas Minnesota. Preemption was a federal enactment (1841) to encourage development, whereby after a time settlers onpublic lands might purchase that porperty at a reasonable price.
    It was just the opportunity that John, now age twenty-one and a citizen, had been waiting for. "He got the western fever,: explained one of his sons many years later. So, after making arrangements with the school and getting things in order, he started out on his great adventure - a trip to the west.
    A prerequisite for traveling at that time was a stout purse well-filled with cash. Travel cards, credit cards, and branch banks were unheard of; nor could the traveler telegraph home for more funds. At each transfer point, John would have to put cash on the counter to get his ticket for the next leg of the journey.
    Additionaly, John had to have physical strength to hold his own against bandits and gunmen in the frontier towns. Strength of character was likewise needed to avoid losing money to a trickster, bunko artist, or even some woman at that time preying on green lads from the country.
    Also, when John reached his destination, he would need money to live on and to develop the new land for which, finally, he had to pay the government. Emergency funds were advisable, too. All of which made a western migration a major project for a young man like John, who had just reached his majority.
    Once at Spring Valley, Minnesota, John worked on his new land. Details of his efforts have been los, but it is recorded that after completing his preemption requirements, John sold out to someone else - not an unusual circumstance at that time.
    Meanwhile, John had heard of rich farmland to be had at a nominal price pleasantly located in north-central Iowa. It was in Worth County, where susequently the small town of Northwood was started. This was an opportunity that appealed to John, who had money in his pocket from the sale of the Spring Valley land.....
    John Slosson arrived in Northwood in 1857, the year the town was plotted. Recognized as one of the first permanent settlers in Worth County, he purchased his farmland in section twenty-nine, now inside the present town of Northwood....
    Meanwhile, John was carrying on with his farming. He was handicapped at times for supplies, since in all Worth county there was only one store. Started late in 1857, this store was operated by B.H. Beckett in a small fame building - the first business structure in that section. Supplies had to be hauled in by ox teams some 130 miles from McGregor on the Mississippi River....By the same token, farm products had to be shipped out by this same route at an understandably high charge, thus reducing the farmer's net income. Nevertheless, John seemed to have managed well, and to have a promising future. In 1859, therefore, when he was twenty-four years old, he made another important decision. it was to return to his home state of New York and there in De Ruyter to marry his sweetheart of schoolteaching days, Roxy Jane Finch....
    When John reached De ruyter, he was greeted by the Finches, who were a large and important family in that new York area. So we can be certain that John and Roxy jane said their vows in a pleasant, old-fashioned church wedding...
    ...John Slosson had first lived on a small farm in section twenty-nine - John's early purchase - in what is now a part of the town of Northwood. This farm was subscquently sold, and in the spring of 1869 John acquired another farm three and a half miles southward from Northwood. It is in section sixteen, Kensett Township; but Northwood, which is in Worth County, still remained the center of the family's interests.
    This new farm was nearly a section of land, or one square mile in size. More precisely, it was a little less than 600 acres. Flowing through th property, adding to its scenic attractiveness, was the Shell Rock River, which passes along the south side of the town of Northwood. The family home - anangular, Eastern-type, two-story frame building - was located on a knoll on the river bank, just out of reach of the seasonal floods...
    John Slosson, Senior, was thirty-four years old when the family moved to the large farm. He is understood to have been reasonably tall and rather spare....He took an active interest in commnitym county, and state affairs. A summary of the father's life as written by his son, Frank.
    Mr. Slosson (John arean, Sr.) helped to organize Kensett township and was chairman of the first board of trustees. He took an active interest in the organization of the same county. He, together with his eldest son, Charles E., established the first creamery in Worth County, it being one of the first in the state. In 1887 he was elected by a large majority to represent Worth County in the State Legislature, but owing to failing health he was not a candidate for reelection.
    He was a successful farmer, taking a special interest in stock raising and horticultural matters. His death occured on March 29, 1900, one day previous to his 65th birthday.
    The foregoing account is in accord with an obituary writted in the local newspaper at that time. Under the heading of "Hon. J.M. Slosson Dead," there is mentioned the community's high esteem "...for one of Worth County's earliest citizens as well as one of its best." It further states that "....with all of his old ambitions and his honors, he was a modet unobtrusive man...of spotless integrity, one who dealt justly with every one and wisted all men well." Continuing on, "he was a public spirited citizen who won the full confidence and liking of all who really knew him."
    ....It was provided in his will that his widow, Roxy Jane, should have a life lease on the property. But subject to this lease, about half of the land - some 300 acres, which included the farmhouse and barns - was willed to his then youngest son, John, Jr., who was at that time helping his father on the farm. Thus he might be expected to remain there. The other half of the property was willed in euql shares to the remaining children - Charles, Mary, and Frank.
    Relieved of the farm's management, as would have been her task had the farm come to her outright shortly after the turn of the century, John's widow, Roxy Jane, moved to Monrovia, California. This was with her daughter Mary, and granddaughter, Jean. John did keep his half of the farm throughout his life. The land portions willed to Charles, Mary, and Frank were sold for their respective accounts.
    Roxy Jane Slosson was living in retirement in Monrovia, California. there she had a small home - a California bungalow, which was occupied jointly with her daughter, Mary, and granddaughter, Jean. Roxy Jane kept busy with fruit trees around the place, as well as being active in local church work.
    Grandmother Roxy Jane (Finch) Slosson in her youth was undoubtedly a good-looking woman of the fair type. Even in later years, her eyes were bright her features regular, and her skin perfectly clear and white. This smooth, clear skin seemed to be a Fionch family characteristic, evidenced in her sisters Hattie and Julia.
    She was an early-day conservationist. Each sack or piece of paper that came into the house was saved on the shelf for future use. Pieces of string, no matter how small, were tied to the end of the string ball, which ever increased in size. Furthermore, grass clippings were placed under the home fruit trees where chickens grazed and lived on table scraps. Thus, the soil was enriched so that more fruit was produced, with the excess being canned in Mason jars to be used as the wintertime dessert.....
    Of rather slight build, Roxy Jane Slosson nevertheless kept alert and active until her passing at the age of seventy-nine. Her buial place is in the Live Oak Cemetery at Monrovia. She can be remembered as a devout, faithful, hard-working pioneer woman, who raised her family under the rugged conditions existent on the early American plains.....

    Family/Spouse: Jennie Roxy FINCH. Jennie was born on 19 May 1840 in Broome Co., New York; died in 1919 in Monrovia, Los Angeles County, California; was buried in Live Oak Cemetery, Monrovia, Los Angeles Co., California. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 5. John Marean SLOSSON, Jr.  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 27 Oct 1876 in Kensett Twp., Worth County, Iowa; died on 09 Mar 1963 in Northwood, Worth County, Iowa.
    2. 6. Charles Eugene SLOSSON  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 25 Sep 1860 in Northwood, Worth County, Iowa; died on 12 Jan 1916 in Monrovia, Los Angeles County, California.
    3. 7. Roy Clinton SLOSSON  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 16 Feb 1879 in Northwood, Worth County, Iowa; died on 08 Jun 1897 in Northwood, Worth County, Iowa.
    4. 8. Mary SLOSSON  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 11 Jul 1862 in Northwood, Worth County, Iowa; died on 23 May 1934 in Los Angeles, Los Angeles County, California.
    5. 9. Frank Abner SLOSSON  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 20 Nov 1864 in Northwood, Worth County, Iowa; died on 30 Jan 1919 in Monrovia, Los Angeles County, California; was buried in Live Oak Cemetery, Monrovia, Los Angeles Co., California.