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Henry Cone
Biography |
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Portrait and Biographical Album of Fulton County,
Illinois: containing full page portraits and biographical sketches of
prominent and representative citizens of the county: together with
portraits and biographies of all the presidents of the United States,
and governors of the state; Biographical Pub. Co., Chicago, IL; 1890;
page 312-315; Transcribed by Margaret Rose Whitehurst
NOTE: as stated on picture: "written at 81 years"
Henry Cone. To show the mettle of the man it is not
necessary to enter the marts of a crowded city, take a place among the
dwellers on the tented field, or journey far from home and friends in
order to make wonderful discoveries. Opportunities are not lacking even
amid the peaceful surroundings of pastoral life, to teach high living,
high thinking, and show energetic action for individual and public
good. The subject of this biographical notice is one who has prospered
by steady industry, and by ever keeping in view the great principle of
doing to others as he would be done by. He has found abundant
opportunities during the course of his long life, to promote the
welfare of his fellow-men by assisting in their worthy undertakings and
by suggesting or instituting movements which tend to mental or moral
culture.
The gentleman of whom we write is the eldest of six brothers,
whose father, Joseph Cone, was the founder of Farmington, naming it in
honor of a Connecticut town in which he was reared. Their mother,
Elizabeth Candee, was, like her husband, a native of Connecticut. The
parental history is noted at some length in the biographical sketch of
Spencer Cone, a brother of our subject, which is included in this
volume. A sketch of another brother, George W. Cone, a farmer near
Farmington, will also be found in this volume. Besides these the
fraternal band included Joseph, David C. and Charles. Joseph, a farmer,
now lives at Ashland, Neb.; his wife, formerly Mary Ann Miles, died in
1888. David married Harriet Cutler and had four children--Eddie,
George, Joseph and Hattie; his home was in Kansas at the time of his
death, in 1885. Charles is a gold miner at Shasta, Cal.
The subject of this notice opened his eyes to the light in
Oxford, Conn., September 17, 1809. While he was still an infant his
parents removed to Harwinton, where he was reared on a farm and where
day after day he followed the old wooden mouldboard plow on his
father's large estate of three hundred acres. Among the stones of the
Connecticut hillsides the barefooted lad learned the lessons of
industry, perseverance and self-reliance, which fitted him for life
upon the frontier to which he accompanied the other members of the
parental family in the spring of 1834. The previous year, in company
with his father and his brother Joseph, he had visited the Prairie
State, prospecting a site in Fulton County being determined upon.
Our subject married Miss Sophia D. Hoadley, the wedding ceremony
taking place March 19, 1834, and the young couple coming Westward as
soon as they could pack their household effects for the journey. The
Erie Canal, Lake Erie and the Ohio Canal were traversed to Portsmouth,
Ohio, where the party took boats for St. Louis and Peoria. There they
hired teams to bring them to what was known as the Merchant Settlement,
which they reached in June. Mr. Cone says "A more fertile tract or one
supporting a more luxuriant vegetation, no man's eyes ever viewed." The
father of our subject had paid $300 apiece for three squatter's claims,
upon which log cabins had been built, and in these rude edifices the
various members of the family were housed upon reaching their
destination. Our subject at once set about breaking, fencing, and
otherwise preparing the land for crops, swinging a maul from morning
until night like many another Illinois rail-splitter. Many hardships
were endured by the new settlers, but Mr. Cone says "I liked this
country, for I was glad and contented."
The first great sorrow of Mr. Cone's life was the death of his
first-born, Elizabeth C., who died at the age of ten years. A still
greater blow befell him in September 1846, when his companion crossed
to the other shore. She left four children Sophia, H. Jennie H., Nellie
M. and Luther Hoadley. The eldest of these married William Field, of
Boston, at one time a dry-goods merchant in Farmington and now a
real-estate dealer in Los Angeles, Cal.; the second daughter married
Silas Hays, of Bloomington, Ill., and they also are now living in the
Golden State; Nellie M. married Daniel James, of Burlington, Iowa,
their home now being on a farm near Grinnell; Luther H. remains at
Farmington, of which he is one of the most popular residents.
Mr. Cone was married a second time, in September, 1847, his
bride being Miss Mary Eggleston, a native of Oneida County, N. Y. This
union has been blessed by the birth of three children, of whom the
first-born, a son, Henry, died when three years old. Merritt H., a
farmer near Farmington, married Miss Mary Jack and has three children;
Maggie E. married Morrison M. Alsbury, formerly of Springfield, their
home now being in Boston, where both are acquiring fame in the musical
world, the one as a violinist and the other as a vocal teacher.
Mr. Cone has always been a farmer and has raised thousands of
bushels of wheat, corn and other cereals, as well as hundreds of
dollars worth of cattle, hogs and horses. Although now eighty-one years
old, he is hale and hearty, in full possession of all his faculties,
and as interested in the work going on about him as when he was looking
forward in early youth. He attributes his remarkable health and mental
preservation to the fact that he has always been a temperate man and of
regular habits. His description of early pioneer experiences is given
with historical accuracy and a fascination equal to that of a romance.
His wealth is the product of industry and economy, as he has never
engaged in speculations of any kind. He is known as one of the most
responsible men and most prompt to meet his obligations, of the State.
He and his son Luther own in common an estate of about three hundred
acres adjoining Farmington on the northeast, which is well improved,
with three residences, one the old Joseph Cone home, which is now
occupied by our subject. Besides his interest in this estate Mr. Cone
owns four hundred and eighty acres in Thayer County, Neb.
Mr. Cone took a very active part with his father in bringing the
Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad through to Farmington. They
subscribed $3,000 in stock, which practically amounted to a donation,
and a few years later subscribed liberally to the Elmwood branch of the
same road. Our subject got out timber from his own woods, hewed it, and
built nearly all the bridges between Farmington and Elmwood. All this
work and donation proved a loss, as the road, although graded, was
never completed. Mr. Cone has always done all he could toward
supporting the religious and educational institutions of this country.
He has served as School Director and prides himself upon the fact that
Farmington has an excellent High School. He is of a rather quiet,
retiring nature, never craving office or putting himself forward in
public affairs. Recognizing his impartiality, his fellow-citizens while
he was living in Knox County were pleased to elect him Justice of the
peace, which position he held four years.
The virgin vote of Mr. Cone was given to Gen. Jackson. He
supported the Whig party and their leaders, William Henry Harrison and
Henry Clay, for the latter of whom he twice deposited his ballot. When
the Republican party was organized he identified himself with it,
voting for Gen. Fremont and afterward helping to elect Lincoln in
1860-64. He has supported Grant, Hayes, Garfield, Blaine, and Harrison
with all the ardor of a firm Republican. He has borne a large part of
the expense connected with the building and support of the
Congregational Church in Farmington. Taking a retrospective view of his
life he recalls mistakes, as who can not? But rejoices in the fact that
his aim has been the "prize of the high calling" and that he has grown
gray in the service of the Lord. That his declining years may be like
the golden rays of the setting sun, bright with promise, and like the
autumn filled with sheaves, is the wish of his many sincere friends,
who will be pleased to notice his portrait on another page (pages
311-312).

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