Elmo Etter, chairman of the Board of Supervisors of Macoupin
County, is a representative citizen of Western Mound township, where he has
lived and engaged in agricultural pursuits throughout his entire life. He
was born August 21, 1875, and is a son of George and Mary (McCoy) Etter. He
is a grandson of Henry and Asbereen Elizabeth (Davidson) Etter and
great-grandson of Henry Etter.
Henry Etter, Sr., our subject's
great-grandfather, was born in Wythe County, Virginia, and at the age of 23
years moved to Eastern Tennessee where he was married to Elizabeth Parks, a
native of that State but of New England ancestry. Twelve children were born
to them. About 1826 they removed to Greene County, Illinois, settling three
miles southeast of Greenfield, at a time when that section was sparsely
settled.
Henry Etter, grandfather of our subject, was born in Andrew
County, Tennessee, May 14, 1820, and was six years of age when he
accompanied his parents to Illinois, here receiving a meagre educational
training in the public schools. He lived with his parents until his marriage
on November 14, 1844, to Asbereen Elizabeth Davidson. She was born in Barren
County, Kentucky, May 12, 1824, and was a daughter of E. Davidson and
Margaret Wright, and granddaughter of John Davidson, who emigrated from
Scotland to America. Henry Etter began farming in Western Mound township on
a farm adjoining that of his father, and in 1845 moved to a farm in section
16, South Palmyra township, where he acquired 480 acres of land (all of
which went to his children), and where he still resides. He is a Democrat in
politics, as was his father before him, and cast his first vote for, Polk in
1844. Four children were born to him and his wife: George, James, Smith and
Elijah.
George Etter was born in South Palmyra township, and was
educated in the common schools of the county. With the exception of four
years spent in teaching school, he has always farmed, and at the present
time owns 160 acres in Western Mound township, and 40 acres in Bird
township. He married Mary C. McCoy, who was born in Missouri and came to
Illinois with her parents. They have four children: Elmo; Horace; Myrtle and
Herbert. In politics he is a Democrat and has served as township supervisor
and township assessor several terms. He is a member of the Modern Woodmen of
America.
Elmo Etter received the rudiments of an education in the
common schools, after which he completed a course in Blackburn University at
Carlinville. He then engaged in teaching for a period of six years, since
which time he has followed farming with a high degree of success. He has
always taken a deep interest in politics, and is enthusiastic in his support
of the Democratic party. He was elected assessor of his township in 1900,
and supervisor of Western Mound township in 1901 and again in 1903, being
made chairman of the Board of Supervisors in June of that year. Although
young in years, Mr. Etter has won the confidence and esteem of the people to
a marked degree and his future is an exceedingly bright one. Fraternally he
is a member of the Modern Woodmen of America, and the M. P. L.
Extracted 2018 May 05 by Norma Hass from Biographical Sketches of Leading Citizens of Macoupin County, Illinois, published in 1904, pages 74-77.
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