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Surnames: Crum, Diehl, Eli, Robenold, Cale
Classification: Biography
Message Board URL:
http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/Ui.2ADI/2329
Message Board Post:
>From "Standard History of Adams and Wells Counties, Indiana," Chicago:
Lewis Publishing Co., 1918, p. 729.
JEFFERSON G. CRUM. Among the energetic and progressive men who are aiding
in every possible manner the growth and development of Adams County,
whether relating to its agricultural or industrial prosperity, is
Jefferson G. Crum of Kirkland Township, deserving of mention in a work of
this character. A son of Daniel Crum, he was born in Mahoning County,
Ohio, November 30, 1859, and there spent his childhood days.
Daniel Crum was born, reared and educated in Pennsylvania. He there
married Elizabeth Diehl, and soon after removed to Mahoning County, Ohio.
Buying land that was in its primitive condition, he erected a log cabin,
barns, and other buildings, and was there employed as a tiller of the soil
until his death, in 1865. The following year, in 1866, his widow came with
her six children to Adams County, Indiana, and settled on the eighty acres
of land now owned and occupied by her sons Jefferson and David. She was a
woman of good business ability, and spent the remainder of her life on the
farm which she had purchased. She reared six children, namely : Frank,
David, Melissa, Rebecca, Jefferson G., and James.
Frank Crum, the oldest child, now deceased, married Emma, daughter of
Constant and Elizabeth Eli, and at his death left four children, William,
Charles, Amos, and Molly. David never married. Melissa, wife of Tillman
Robenold, has four children, William, Charles, Floyd, and Daisy Ann is
deceased. Rebecca, who married Wolf Cale, has five children, Howard,
Charles, Mabel, Ward, and Delbert. James Crum married Nora Church, of
Adams County, and they are parents of five children, Gladys, Mitchell,
Levaun, Elsie, and Spafford.
Coming with his widowed mother from Ohio to Indiana, where her two
brothers, now deceased, were then living, Jefferson G. Crum was educated
in the district schools, and later served an apprenticeship at the
carpenter's trade. In 1899 Mr. Crum and his brother David purchased the
interests of the other heirs in his mother's estate, which now consists of
seventy-nine acres, one acre having been sold for school property.
Although he is a practical and successful agriculturist, he prefers
working at his trade rather than at farming, and has built a large
percentage of the houses and buildings in this locality, each and all of
which bespeak his thorough knowledge of the different branches of
carpentry and joining.
Like his brother David, Mr. Crum is still a bachelor. He is a democrat in
his political affiliations, but has never been an aspirant for official honors.
[Poster is not directly related and has no further information]