Edward
G. Duckles, one of the prominent
and substantial farmers of Polk Township, Macoupin County, where he owns a
fine farm situated in section 4, was born in 1842 in Chesterfield township,
Macoupin County and is a son of William and Frances (Garlick) Duckies.
William Duckies was born January 19, 1805, in the West Riding of
Yorkshire, England, and was a son of Thomas Duckies who was a prosperous
tenant farmer of the Southern family of that locality. William received fair
educational training and assisted his father in farming until he decided to
find a new home in America. With his wife and infant daughter, he left
England on May 20, 1834, taking passage in a sailing ship bound for Quebec,
Canada. His objective point was Morgan County, Illinois, but after reaching
his destination he did not feel entirely satisfied, and in February, 1835,
removed to Macoupin County and settled in Chesterfield township, in section
14. Here he first entered 160 acres of land, 80 of this being in timber, and
on the other 80 he erected his first home. Although Mr. Duckies was much
more fortunate than many of the early settlers, having brought means with
him from England, it required much of the preserving industry, for which his
race is noted, to bring this wild prairie land under cultivation. This he
gradually accomplished and added largely to his first purchase, and at the
time of his death, in 1891, he owned 700 acres of land in Macoupin County,
part of it lying in Polk township and part in Chesterfield. All is arable,
well watered, finely located land, and this farm is included among the best
in the county. Mr. Duckies was a man of robust physique and was endowed by
Nature with those qualities which commanded the respect of those with whom
he came in contact, making him a natural leader in his locality, and much of
the educational development of his section as well as its agricultural may
be attributed to his influence. In early life a Whig, his opposition to
slavery made him a strong supporter of the principles of the Republican
party, when it was organized.
In September, 1830, in his native
village, Mr. Duckies married Frances Garlick, and a family of 10 children
were born to them, the surviving members being the following: Sarah Ann,
born in England, who is the wife of Judge T. L. Loomis, of Carlinville;
Thomas, who resides at Jacksonville, Morgan County; Edward G., the subject
of this sketch; Eliza, who married John W. Armstrong of Polk township;
Victoria, who married John Simms, now of Colorado Springs; and Joseph R.,
who resides in Chesterfield township, Macoupin County. William, the eldest
child, and Grace (Carter) are deceased.
Edward G. Duckies attended
the local schools and found plenty of work on his father's farm until the
outbreak of the Civil War. In 1862 he offered his services to his country,
enlisting in the 122d Reg., Illinois Vol. Inf., and served faithfully until
mustered out at Springfield, in 1865. He participated in innumerable
skirmishes and the following serious engagements: Parker's Cross Roads;
Tupelo; Town Creek; Nashville; and the last engagement of the war, which
took place at Fort Blakely. At Parker's Cross Roads he was slightly wounded.
After his return from the army, Mr. Duckies resumed work on his
father's farm and continued there until 1869, in which year he was married
to Emma L. Lawson, who is a daughter of Z. B. and Louisa (Williams) Lawson.
The Lawson family is an old settled one in Herkimer County, New York, from
which section the father of Mrs. Duckies came to Illinois, a pioneer, and
located first at White Hall, later in Polk township, and died in 1877 in
Chesterfield township, aged 63 years. Mr. and Mrs. Lawson had a family of
six children, two of whom died in infancy. Edwin, the eldest son, died in
1869, from the effects of a wound received in the army. William, another
son, became a civil engineer, located at Denver, Colorado, and died there in
1900, survived by two children. Mrs. Duckies has one sister, Lucetta, who
resides with her. For 20 years Miss Lucetta Lawson had charge of the
orphans' home located at Chattanooga, Tennessee, and at Atlanta, Georgia.
Mr. and Mrs. Duckies have these children: Emma Fay, who married W.
A. Hoblit, now resides at Jacksonville, Illinois; William L., the cashier of
the Bank of Chesterfield, who married Cora Snell, a daughter of Silas and
Annie Snell of Polk township; Myron E., formerly engaged in teaching in the
city of Mexico, but now an assayer, who married Grace Murdock, formerly of
Jacksonville, but for many years a resident of Mexico with her parents;
Perry, who served in the 5th Illinois Regiment, in the Spanish War, — he
married Kitty Phelps, a daughter of Jeremiah Phelps of Chesterfield, and
resides at home; and Frederick, who is attending school at Jacksonville.
Lewis L. died in infancy.
In politics, Mr. Duckies is a Republican.
In religious views he is a Congregationalist. Fraternally he is a Mason and
a member of the Modern Woodmen of America.
Mr. Duckies is a man of
sterling business qualities, a factor in shaping political and public
movements in his locality, and one who is active in promoting the general
prosperity of the community. His portrait accompanies this sketch.
Extracted 2018 May 04 by Norma Hass from Biographical Sketches of Leading Citizens of Macoupin County, Illinois, published in 1904, pages 56-59.
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