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 Biographies of Bibb County
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WALLACE, JOHN,
soldier of the American Revolution, aged 75, and a
resident of Bibb County; private N. C. Militia; enrolled
on June 17, 1834, under act of Congress on June 7, 1832,
payment to date from March 4, 1831; annual allowance,
$80. — Revolutionary Pension Roll, in part 3, vol. xiii,
Sen. doc. 514, 23rd Cong., 1st sess., 1833-34. He
resided in Bibb County, June 1, 1840, aged 80 to 90.—
Census of Pensioners, 1841, p. 149. Source: History of Alabama
and Dictionary of Alabama Biography, By Thomas McAdory
Owen, Marie Bankhead Owen, Published by The S. J. Clarke
publishing company, 1921; Submitted by Barb Ziegenmeyer
WARD, JOHN, soldier
of the American Revolution, aged 77, and a resident of
Bibb County; private N. C. Militia; enrolled January 4,
1834, under act of Congress of June 7, 1832, payment to
date from March 4. 1831; annual allowance, $30. —
Revolutionary Pension Roll, in part 3, vol. xiii. Sen.
doc. 514, 23rd Cong., 1st sess 1833-34. Source: History of Alabama
and Dictionary of Alabama Biography, By Thomas McAdory
Owen, Marie Bankhead Owen, Published by The S. J. Clarke
publishing company, 1921; Submitted by Barb Ziegenmeyer
WARE, HORACE , iron
manufacturer, was born April 11, 1812, in Lynn, Mass.,
and died July, 1890, in Birmingham; son of Jonathan and
Roxana (Howe) Ware, residents of Massachusetts, New
York, North Carolina, and Alabama, locating in Bibb
County. Mr. Ware received his early education in his
native state and in North Carolina, whither he had gone
in childhood with his parents. He learned the iron
business from his father, who erected a water power
forge in Bibb County, later selling it to his son. In
1840 he bought the iron ore beds in Shelby County, and
in a few years erected a cold blast furnace for the
manufacture of pig iron, the first, or at most, the
second furnace plant in Alabama. The product was hauled
six miles by wagon to the Coosa river 1727 and placed on
fiat boats bound for Montgomery, Prattville and Mobile.
He manufactured all kinds of cooking utensils,
heating and cooking stoves. He was the pioneer
rolling mill operator in the State, beginning in
1859, the erection of a mill for the
manufacture of iron bars and cotton ties. In
1865, Federal troops under Gen. Wilson destroyed
this property, but it was later rebuilt by
northern capital. After a connection of forty years,
he sold his interest in 1881. He purchased, during
the early sixties, iron properties in
Talladega County, forming in 1872, a
partnership with Col. S. S. Glidden, of Ohio, and
organized the Alabama iron company. In 1881, A. L.
Tyler and Samuel Noble of Anniston, purchased
Mr. Glidden's interest, the new company
being called the Clifton iron company. In 1888, he
sold his holdings to his partners, having four
years earlier become interested in
Sheffield, being president of the first furnace erected
at that place. In 1881, he bought the Kelly
furnace, near Jefferson, Texas, where he manufactured
car wheel iron,
but in 1883, he sold his property. Being familiar with the
mineral resources of the State he foresaw the
development of the region and predicted the
splendid things that have since developed.
Married: (1) to Martha A. Woodruff, (2) in
Columbiana, to Mary, daughter of George and
Matilda T. (Roper) Harris, the former a native
of Monroe County, Tenn., a lawyer who lived in
McMinn County, Tenn.; granddaughter of Jesse
and Matilda T. Harris of Jefferson County,
Tenn., and of Joseph and Mary Roper, who lived at
Dandrldge, Tenn., and later at
Columbiana. Mrs. Ware was the author of a volume of
poems that were published in 1911 in
Birmingham. She also contributed for twenty years
to "The South," published in New York city.
There were seven children by the first
marriage. Last residence: Birmingham. Source: History of Alabama
and Dictionary of Alabama Biography, By Thomas McAdory
Owen, Marie Bankhead Owen, Published by The S. J. Clarke
publishing company, 1921; Submitted by Barb Ziegenmeyer
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