Randolph HOWERTON was
born in Johnson County on his father's farm in 1857. His father, John
W. Howerton, was born in Tennessee in 1821. He is
a son of Benjamin F. Howerton, a Virginian by birth, whose father was a
Colonel in the Revolutionary army. Benjamin Howerton married a Miss
Barnard. Randolph Howerton is the sixth child and the third son. He was
reared at home on the old farm on which his parents still live. He
received but little education
in his younger days, beginning hard work and following the plow at ten
years of age. At eighteen he left home and went to Kansas, where he
worked on
farms in different parts of the eastern part of the State. Later he
traveled through Indian Territory. Returning home at the end of one
year's experience in the West, he began in earnest to secure an
education. He attended the district school one winter, and one summer
he attended a select school at Sulphur
Springs, Williamson County, Ill., where his maternal grandmother, Mrs.
Randolph Casey, whose maiden name was Graves, lived about seventy-five
years ago. Randolph Casey was a son of Levi Casey, who was born in
Ireland. He was a brother of Gov. Zadoc Casey, who died at Mount
Vernon, Ill.,
at a ripe old age. Randolph Casey died at the age of seventy-seven
years.
Randolph Howerton
engaged in teaching his first school during the winter of 1878-79, and
has since then taught ten winter terms of school. He was at
the
State Normal School at Carbondale one term in his twenty-eighth year.
He was married at twenty years, his wife being then eighteen. She was
Eliza
McCuan, a native of Johnson County, and a daughter of Jacob and Sallie
(Boozer) McCuan, the former of whom came from Alabama, and the
latter
from South Carolina. They emigrated from Kentucky to Illinois during
the war of the Rebellion. Her mother died when she was seven years old,
but her
father is still living at Tunnel Hill. He was a soldier four years
during the war. Mr. and Mrs. Howerton have lived in the rural districts
of Johnson County
most of their married lives, but they lived in Vienna about one year,
where he pursued the study of the law, and while living there he was
elected police magistrate. They have lived in this township for a
period of three years, and one year on their
present little farm of forty-seven acres, but this is only their
temporary home. They have two sons and one daughter, namely: Thaddeus
Stevens, thirteen years old; Lucius Poe, born January 1, 1888; and
Maude S.,
a young miss of nine years. They are healthy and bright children and
are making satisfactory progress in their studies.
Mr. Howerton is a
Master Mason and is a stanch Republican. Mrs. Howerton is a member of
the Christian Church. Capt. Levi B. Casey, a brother of
the mother of Mr. Howerton, was Captain of Company B, Thirty-first
Illinois Infantry, Gen. John A. Logan's regiment. He was a remarkable
specimen
of a man and soldier, standing six feet two inches and weighing two
hundred and twenty-five pounds. He was a fine looking man and a most
genial comrade.
He fell in battle at the siege of Vicksburg. Levi Casey, the
grandfather of Capt. Casey, was one of the very earliest pioneers of
this part of Illinois, settling
in
the wilderness where what is now Casey Spring is located about 1800. He
was a great hunter and settled there on that account. This spring is
one of the finest and best in this part of the State.