Adam
Deahl, a prominent citizen of Macoupin county, who for several years
past has been living retired at Shipman, was born in Allegany county,
now Garrett county, Maryland, March 18, 1840. He is a son of Andrew and
Matilda (Shultz) Deahl, the former of whom was born in Hesse-Darmstadt,
near Frankfort, Germany, in 1809, and the latter in Somerset county,
Pennsylvania, March 16, 1820. The paternal grandfather of our subject
was Baulshar Deahl who was born in Hesse-Darmstadt about 1764 and was
the father of six children, namely: Henry and Conrad, both of whom died
in Germany; Baulshar, who came to America and settled in Maryland where
his death occurred; Elizabeth, who married John Stein, of Hickman,
Lancaster county, Nebraska, and is now deceased; Andrew; and Catharine,
who became the wife of John Steivnagel, of Garrett county, Maryland, and
is now deceased. Henry and Conrad were soldiers under Napoleon Bonaparte
and died after returning home, from the effects of the hardships which
they underwent in the Napoleonic compaigns.
Andrew Deahl, father
of our subject, received his early education in the public schools of
Germany and at the age of twenty-six years came to America, landing at
Baltimore, Maryland. In 1833 he went to Somerset county, Pennsylvania,
and worked on a farm near Pocahontas. Later he removed to Allegany
county, Maryland, and assisted Adam Shultz in completing a contract
which Mr. Shultz had taken for constructing a section of the National
turnpike between Baltimore and Wheeling. After the completion of the
work, in 1835, Mr. Deahl was married to Matilda Shultz, a daughter of
his employer, and bought some timber land in Allegany county. He cleared
away the timber and made his home there until 1865 when he came west
with his children and their families and settled at Shipman, Illinois.
He purchased land which he cultivated for a time but in 1879 disposed of
his farm and moved to Lancaster, Nebraska, purchasing a section of land
near Hickman. After a few years he retired, dying at an advanced age in
1886. Thirteen children were born to Andrew and Matilda Deahl, as
follows: Elizabeth, the widow of Casper Martin, of Hickman, Nebraska;
Adam, of this review; Katharine, who became the wife of John Martin, of
Hickman, and is now deceased; Henry, who makes his home at St. Louis,
Missouri; Sarah, the wife of Ferdinand R. Kahl, of Shipman, Illinois;
Mary, who married Thomas Hillier, of Hickman, Nebraska; Huldah, who
became the wife of Silas Webster, of Shipman, Illinois, and is now
deceased; Sevilla, who died at the age of six years; John A., a resident
of Caldwell, Kansas; Emma Jane, who passed away at the age of four
years; George W., who lives in Salt Lake City, Utah; Chauncey F., of
Lincoln, Nebraska; and Nancy Matilda, who died in infancy.
Adam Deahl received his early
education in the public schools of Maryland and assisted his father upon
the home farm until twenty-one years of age. He then began renting land
upon his own account and so continued until 1865, when he came to
Shipman, Illinois, to look over the country. In the fall of the same
year he moved his family to Shipman and engaged in contracting and
building, having learned the carpenter’s trade in the east before coming
to Illinois. He erected a number of substantial structures in Shipman
and vicinity, among which may be named the Evangelical Lutheran church
of Shipman. In 1876 he bought one hundred and twenty acres of land of
his father and took up his residence on his farm but did not discontinue
his contracting business entirely until 1891. In 1885 he purchased a
second tract of one hundred and twenty acres and in the year following
acquired one hundred and twenty acres additional, the last two purchases
being on sections 22 and 14, Shipman township. He still owns his farm of
three hundred and sixty acres. He erected new buildings and commodious
barns and granaries, making his place one of the best equipped farming
establishments in Macoupin county. He engaged quite extensively in the
dairy business and maintained fifty head of Shorthorn cows, being one of
the largest dairymen in this section. In 1906 he retired from active
labor and moved to
Shipman where he built a beautiful modern
residence of thirteen rooms which stands in an entire block of ground.
About fourteen years ago he assisted in organizing the Shipman Banking
Company and is now serving as vice president of that institution.
On
May 19, 1861, Mr. Deahl was married to Miss Elizabeth Simon, who
was born in Allegany county, Maryland, April 25, 1845, a daughter of
John and Katharine (Peck) Simon. The paternal grandfather of Mrs. Deahl
was George Simon, who was born in Frankfort, Germany. He was a member of
a distinguished family of landowners, his wife, Elizabeth Ringer, of
Frankfort, also belonging to a family of large landowners. Mr. Simon
came to America with his wife and four children and settled at Accident,
Allegany county, Maryland, in 1831. They were the parents of six
children: John, the father of Mrs. Deahl; Carolina, who became the wife
of Balsar Fultz, of Iowa, and is now deceased; Katharine, who married
John Georg of Accident, Maryland, and is now deceased; Theodore, who
lived in Garrett county, Maryland, and is also deceased; Mary, the wife
of Samuel Rodemer, of West Salisbury, Somerset county, Pennsylvania; and
Huldah, who married Samuel McCrorey, of New York city.
John
Simon, the father of Mrs. Deahl, was born in 1825 and was reared on his
father’s farm. In 1866 he came west with his family and located one and
onehalf miles north of Farmersville, Montgomery county, Illinois, where
he continued during the remainder of his life. The maiden name of his
wife was Katharine Peck, a native of Somerset county, Pennsylvania. Her
father, Henry Peck, was of English descent and her mother, Eva Beachley,
was of Pennsylvania Dutch parentage. To the union of John and Katharine
(Peck) Simon were born eighteen children, namely: Elizabeth, who married
Adam Deahl; Joseph, who died in Allegany county, Maryland; Susanna, now
the wife of Chris Segrist, of Humboldt, Nebraska; Benjamin, who also
died in Allegany county, Maryland; Sarah, who married John Huntley, of
Morrisonville, Illinois; Sevilla, the wife of Jacob Neff, of Salina,
Kansas; George, who made his home at Farmersville, Illinois, and is now
deceased; Louisa, who married Aaron Lentz, of Adrian, Missouri; Henry,
of Allegany, Maryland, also deceased; Jonas, who makes his home at East
St. Louis, Illinois; Mary, who died at Allegany, Maryland; Catherine,
the wife of Samuel Reber, of Lawrence, Nebraska; Huldah, who lived in
Allegany county, Maryland, and is now deceased; Julia, now Mrs. Edward
Browning, of Waggoner, Illinois; Lucinda, the widow of James Vaughn, of
Girard, Illinois; Alice, the widow of John Didlock, of Wyoming; and John
and Adam, both of whom died in infancy. Ten children were born to Mr.
and Mrs. Deahl, one of whom died in infancy. Matilda married Lafayette
Clardy, of Katy, Texas. Perry*died very early in life. Susan E. married
Samuel Schaefer, of Shipman township, and they have six children living,
namely, Charles, Seaman, Walter, Emma, Martha and Stella. Andrew also
died early in life. Henry C., is in charge of his father’s farm, in
Shipman township, and a record of his life is given elsewhere in this
work. Mary Ellen married William Clower, a farmer of Shipman township,
and they have three children, William, Gladys and Ann Ellen. Royal A.
married Hattie Gillespie and they have four children, Roberta, Toleda,
Lorein and Adam Robert. Virginia died when she was sixteen years of age
and Lottie, at the age of one year.
Politically Mr. Deahl, whose
name introduces this sketch, has given his adherence to the democratic
party ever since he arrived at his majority. He served as school
director at Shipman for one term but after that time declined public
office. Religiously he has for many years been identified with the
Evangelical Lutheran church of Shipman and is one of the councilmen of
the church. His success in life is attributable to a capable direction
of his business afifairs and his sound judgment and close application.
No man in the county stands higher in the estimation of friends and
acquaintances and few have contributed more materially toward the
development of this region. His business integrity has never been
questioned and today he enjoys in peace and prosperity the results of
his well directed endeavors.
Extracted 15 Nov 2018 by Norma Hass from History of Macoupin County, Illinois: Biographical and Pictorial, by Charles A. Walker, published in 1911, Volume 2, pages 410-417.
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