Showing posts with label John Partee. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Partee. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 12, 2017

Captain John Partee, Brunersburg


Captain John Partee was a well known, early pioneer in Noble Township.  He was active in his church, his grange, and in community affairs, including military service.  Early newspapers published about fair time each year listed his name as a winner for his potato and apple entries.  
His extensive obituary appeared in the Defiance County Express on April 1, 1886:






"IN MEMORIAM.

Capt. John Partee, son of John and Nancy Partee, was born near Adelphi, Ross county, Ohio, May 15, 1812, and died at his residence near Brunersburg, March 19th, 1886, aged 73 years, 10 months and 4 days.   

He was the youngest child and last survivor of a family of ten children.  The older were George, Elizabeth, James, Joseph, Enoch, Deborah, Lewis, Lawrence, and Hannah.  His brothers, James, Joseph and Enoch, came to what is now Brunersburg 1817 to 1822.  

His father was a teamster in the war of 1812, and his brothers, James and Joseph, were privates in Capt. Duncan McArthur's (afterward Governor of Ohio) company and were stationed at the ill fated field of River Raisin at the time of Hull's surrender of Detroit.  At the age of 19 years, he came from Ross county with the rest of his father's family and settled on the farm in Noble township where he resided till his death, a period of nearly 62 years.  This was 1824, and government lands being cheap, different members of the family bought several fractions lying along the Tiffin river, from Brunersburg to the present site of Evansport.

Among the other early settlers were John Perkins (who came in 1816), William Travis, John Wissler, Brice Hilton, Enos Partee, William Doty, Obadiah Webb, William Buck, and John Lawrence.  His uncle, Enoch Williams, was also in the war and his discharge written at Lower Sandusky in 1814 is in possession of J. P. Partee of Defiance.  Among other interesting papers handed down from early times is a summons from Sheriff Preston to John Partee, Sr. to attend court in Defiance as a juror and dated 1826 also a deposition filed by him in 1804.

In their route from Ross county, they came by way of Sidney and Wapakoneta, thence down the river to old Fort Defiance which was still partially preserved as was old Fort Winchester which was not far from the present site of the Russell House.  At that time there were but two houses on the Tiffin river near Defiance.  These were occupied by John Perkins and Joseph Partee.  After stopping all night at Joseph's, they cut their way to what is now the old homestead, then a unbroken wilderness, inhabited by wild beasts and Indians.  The latter were generally friendly disposed toward the new comers, and they made the acquaintance of some noted chiefs, among them Occonoxee, a Pottawatomie, and an old man named Shane who stated he was born under the large apple tree near the bank of the river across from Defiance.
Large numbers of bullets were found on the banks of the Maumee, and sometimes brass kettles were found hidden in hollow trees, no doubt left there by the Indians. 

The subject of our sketch was in early life a great hunter and trapper, and even if memoranda were at hand, it would require a volume to give a full account of his life, of his privations in the early development of the country, his hardships in subduing the wilderness, and his struggles in company with the early pioneers.

He loved to range the woods where Nature had erected her throne, and in the last years of his life, when age had enfeebled his once athletic frame, he was as skilled with the rifle as most young men of his day.  

Of the history of his ancestors, but little is known with certainty.  Those on his mother's side were from Holland and on his father's, natives of France.  No family record was made and the date and place of birth of his parents were unknown, nor was the ages of most of his brothers and sisters correctly known.

About 1841, he was appointed Captain of a company of Ohio militia and rose to the rank of Major, and again in 1861, he was elected capain of a company of Home Guards.

Nancy Brown Partee
  Oct. 10th, 1839, he was married to Miss Nancy Brown who survives him.  To them were born 7 children, 5 of whom are living.  Alvaro, the eldest was killed in the war of the rebellion, and Reuben B. died in infancy.  

About 1840, his parents removed to near Pulaski, Ohio, where his mother soon after died, his father then returned and died at the residence of his son in 1846, aged about 81 years.  At the time of his death, 
Father Partee had been a member of the Methodist Episcopal church for a period of more than a third of a century, having united with that branch in 1852, during which time had held many important official positions in the church, and while in him, it could sometimes be seen that it was human to err, yet those who knew him best always recognized in him the ever obliging neighbor, the honest and upright citizen, a true and affectionate husband, and the kind and indulgent father.

For two years last past, he had been a patient sufferer, partly from a slight attack of paralysis, and in part from injuries received by the kick of a horse.  The cause of his death was dropsy of the heart, consequent from his injuries received last July, at which time he was seriously injured internally by being run over by a drunken and reckless driver.  

During his last suffering, he was patient and resigned, and conscious almost to his last moments, and rejoicing in the Christian's hope and promise that beyond the dark cloud of suffering, there was a happier worldabove.

Appropriate services were held Sunday, March 21st at Rural Chapel, conducted by Rev. S. W. Scott, after which the remains were quietly interred in the family lot in the Webb Run cemetery on the pleasant banks of the river over whose surface he loved to glide more than three score years ago, and the music of whose rushing waters shall be his requiem as from a deserted bedside there runs back tender memories to a grave of buried love." 

Defiance County Express - April 1, 1886

 

Sunday, October 2, 2016

Corporal Alvero Partee - Defiance County Soldier


 Alvero Partee
1840 - 1864


Alvero, the oldest child of John and Nancy (Brown) Partee, was born on December 5th, 1840.  His childhood was spent on the family farm that his grandparents had settled when they came to the wilderness area near Fort Defiance in 1824.

He was only four when his grandfather, John Partee, Sr., was buried in the little cemetery (Webb) on the banks of the Tiffin River where his father had played as a child.  Two years later, his grandmother was buried in the same little cemetery.

Alvero attended school and worked on the farm.  As he grew to manhood, the Country was gradually experiencing the threat that George Washington alluded to as a concern for the newly formed Union in his Farewell Address: 

"When designing men or parties may endeavor to excite a believe that there is a real difference of local interest and views by geographical discrimination, Northern and Southerner, Atlantic and Western, it must end in peaceful dissolution or Civil War must follow."  

His words were prophetic when the Confederacy was formed by seven Southern states and on April 12th, 1861, the guns sounded at Fort Sumter.

Soon after, Alvero, age 20, five feet, five inches, light complected, grey eyes, brown hair, went to Defiance and enlisted for three years.  He was mustered in at Camp Dick Robinson on October 14, 1861.  Information is sketchy, but in January and February, 1862, he was at Camp Calvert, Kentucky.  On May 21st of that same year, he was promoted to Corporal.

By September 19, 1863, he was with a Union force of fifty-five thousand, advancing on the vital Confederate supply and communication base at Chattanooga, Tennessee.  They met a Southern Army at Chickamauga Creek, south of the city.  The Union forces fought admirably, but the blundering tactics of their commander, General Rosecrans, contributed to their defeat on September 20th.  Corporal Alvero Partee was wounded on the field of battle and reported missing in action. 

The final statement from the Adjutant General's office, dated June 15th, 1865, reads as follows:

"Cpl. Alvero Partee served faithfully in the field and is now discharged by reason of death.  He died in the rebel prison at Atlanta, Georgia, February 21st, 1864, by reason of wounds received at Chickamauga."

One of Alvero Partee's letters home from 1862 has survived!  It is in the possession of Roena Bayes and is transcribed as written below. Some words were difficult to see or were in the folds of the paper and could not be read.  A line will indicate missing words.

"Near Lebanon Ky  Oct 27th/ 62

Dear Sisters

With pleasure I take my pen in hand to let you know that I am well at pesent and hope when these few lines may find you the same

we are camped about six miles from Lebanon on the Rolling Fork     we have water handy and as good times as we can expect without our tents
yours of the 9th and 12th were duly rec'd but we were on the march and I could not ans.    then sooner than usual we did not have a hand in the late fight but we were within cannon shot     Gen. Fry asked for his Brig. twice but we were not permitted to take any part    perhaps it is as well the way _____ as any are comming and snowing night before last about dark and in the morning there was a nice little snow about 3 inches deep but it is all gone today    it is a pleasant day

perhaps you wonder how we passed that snowy night    we have a shelter made of fodder and rails and plenty of straw    we sleep as snugly as a lot of pigs    

I was glad to get that list of drafted men    it is a pity that some more of them were not served the same
I have not rec'd one copy of that paper yet

I am glad you have so many apples    they are very dear here now   i want you to have plenty of boiled cider for I trust ere long I will be home to drink some of it.    The Rebels can't hold out long if our men do their duty

I have not seen Nate or C. W. since I last wrote    they were camped about 2 miles from here the other night     some of the co. were here    they said they left C. W. at Frankfort sick with the ague    I was going to see them the next day but I heard they had left for Nashville

It is rather cool here for writing out of door ____    I will write to him tomorrow
______     no more this time but look for another soon if we stay here ______
we are going to bowling green     Alvero

*This research and letter was kindly donated by Roena Bayes, who gave permission for its publication here.