1884 BIOGRAPHICAL
SKETCHES
CITY OF FAIRFIELD
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F. M. WOOLARD was born January 1835, near where the village of Mulberry Grove now stands, in Bond County, Ill. He is the son of Rev. James B. Woolard, a Methodist minister, well known in Southern Illinois. James B., the son of Willoughby a Rebecca (Fatheree) Woolard, was born December 16, 1804, in Beauford County, N.C. removed with his parents to Tennessee 1810, and settled soon after on Leeper's Creek Maury County, where he married Mary, daughter of Abraham and Nancy (Brown) McCurley, March 15 1827; removed to Greenville, Illl. with a "spike team" (the wheel horses were oxen) in 1829, and to his present location in 1831. He was a Bugler in Black Hawk war; represented Bond County in the Legislature in 1844-45; and was Chaplain in the One Hundred and Eleventh Illinois Volunteer Infantry in the late war. His brothers, Churchell, of Tennessee; William of Missouri, and Seth, of Mississippi, all served their country in Jackson's wars. His sister, Winifred, married Henry Gardner, of Montgomery County, Ill. Mary (mater) was born March 24, 1805, in Allen County, Ky., and with her parents moved to Tennessee, where she was married. She lived with her husband for more than fifty-six years, and died August 20. 1883, having been a member of the Methodist Episcopal Church over sixty-six years. To James and Mary were born six children - Nancy R. (Vest), of Greenville; Eveline C. (Harris), of Hillsboro; Washington W. (deceased); our subject; Mary S. Elliott (deceased); Margaret I. (Harris), of Greenville, Ill.; W. W., a Captain in the Twenty-sixth Illinois Volunteers, died January 9, 1882, and his wife, Lucy (Stites), with Lilian, Estella, Samuel F., Winifred and James, their children, live in Wichita, Kan. Abraham's father, was of Scotch descent, and slain in the Revolutionary war. Nancy was a niece of Judge Brown, of Kentucky. Wiloughby, the son, of John, was born in North Carolina in 1761, and died at the age of eighty-five years, in Fayette County, Ill. His brothers were. John, Jr., Absalom and Jerermiah. John (patter), the son of John, was born in 1695, and died in 1800.. His nephew, Aligood, of Lebanon, Tenn., died in 1868, aged one hundred and fifteen years. The first John was an Englishman, an early settler in North Carolina, and a tradition has been handed down in the family that he sold his peltries,, the result of. one winter's hunting, for his hat full of silver. His brother settled in the northern colonies, and his descendants are called " Willard." Rebecca, born in Massachusetts in 1771, was the daughter of Maj. Fatheree, who was killed in the Revolutionary war. She remembered the British soldiers plundering her mother's house, leaving the family destitute. She was for seventy years a Regular Baptist and died in Polk County, Mo., in 1862, amid trying scenes, very similar to those of her early childhood. Subject was raised a farmer, attended school in winter; remembers when wolves, deer and panthers were common; attended the academy in Greenville; McKendree College, in Lebanon; taught school over three years; was Deputy County Clerk in Vandalia; six years a circuit preacher, and four years Superintendent of Schools in Wayne County. Subject was married November 9, 1859, to Miss Margaret, daughter of William J. Crews, of Palestine, Ill., and to them were born Charles W. in Bond Township, Lawrence County, Ill., September 22, 1863. "Charlie" was highly skilled andlearned for one of his age, in the sciences, and the laws of mechanics and forces. His ingennity wass a matter of surprises and often of amazement to his friends. Being employed in the machine shops at Springfield, he was accidentally killed, September 18, 1880, regretted by all who knew him. His remains are entombed on the hill in the new cemetery in the northeast part of Fairfield. William F. was born in Lawrence County March 5, 1865. . He gathers many curiosities, having several pieces of "British stamped paper," about 1, 500 rare and odd coins, among which are some "Jewish mites" Mary A. was born in Fairfield November 30, 1871, and is a promising musician for one of her age. The mother, Capt. W. W., and Mary S. lie buried on the spot where the first church was built, in the east part of Bond County.
Jan 3, 2000
Copyright © Dec. 1999. D. Williams;
All rights reserved.
Last rev. by D. Williams