A
successful member of the Macoupin county bar is E. W. Hayes, who for the
past forty-four years has been a resident of Bunker Hill. He was born in
Franklin county, Pennsylvania, on the 30th of January, 1837, and is of
Irish extraction, being a direct descendant of David Hayes, who with his
brothers emigrated to America prior to the Revolution. He first settled
in the vicinity of Dauphin, Pennsylvania, and some years afterward with
his wife, whose maiden name was Mary Wilson, removed to Franklin county,
that state. That section, which was then considered far removed from the
centers of civilization, was just beginning to be settled by the whites.
They located on a farm in South Hampton township, where they spent the
remainder of their lives and that property remained in the family for
two generations thereafter. It was the birthplace of Wilson Hayes, to
whom it descended upon the death of his father. He continued to engage
in the cultivation of the land, on which he spent practically his entire
life, until his death at the age of seventy-two years. For his wife
Wilson Hayes chose Miss Mary Culbertson, who was also of Irish
extraction and like himself a faithful and earnest member of the
Presbyterian church. Six children were born of this union, the old
homestead becoming the property of the eldest, David, after the father
passed away. He operated the land for many years and then, disposing of
it, removed to Shippensbury, Cumberland county, Pennsylvania, where he
was living at the time of his demise at the age of sixty-seven years. He
married Nancy Cowell, a native of Cumberland county, and they became the
parents of six sons and two daughters, all of whom lived to attain
maturity. The mother also passed away in Cumberland county.
The
boyhood and youth of E. W. Hayes were as uneventful and unvaried in
their routine as those of the majority of lads who are reared on a farm.
He acquired his early education in the common schools of his native
state, after the completion of which he entered Lafayette College at
Easton, Pennsylvania, from which he was graduated. He then taught two
years in an academy at Dickinson, Pennsylvania. When the call came for
troops he was one of the first to respond, going to the front as a
private in Company A, Seventh Pennsylvania Reserves, which formed a part
of the Army of the Potomac. He saw much active service, participating in
both battles of Bull Run, that of Antietam and Fredericksburg, as well
as many of lesser importance. Although he was in the thick of many
closely contested skirmishes and battles he was never wounded, but he
did contract typhoid fever, finally being discharged on account of
disability. He returned home much broken in health and after he had
recovered sufficiently resumed his law studies, entering the office of
R. P. McClure, and was admitted to the bar in 1865. Two years later he
took up his residence in Illinois, locating at Bunker Hill, where he has
since made his home. He has ever been a credit to his profession, both
as a student and in his methods of practice, and is held in high regard
by his fellow members of the bar, wherever he is known.
In Franklin county, Pennsylvania,
April 13, 1870, Mr. Hayes married Miss Margaret F. Heck, who was born in
Shippensbury, Cumberland county, on the 18th of July, 1848. Mrs. Hayes
is a daughter of Jacob and Margaret (Sturgeon) Heck, the father of Dutch
extraction and the mother of Scotch-Irish. To Mr. and Mrs. Hayes were
born six children: Margaret G., Bertha, Edgar H., Ralph H. and Joseph
A., all living; and Alma, deceased.
The family were reared in
the Congregational faith, of which church both Mr. and Mrs. Hayes are
members. He is a stanch republican and was twice nominated for county
judge but was defeated because of the overwhelming democratic majority
at the time. He is an active member of the Grand Army of the Republic
and always takes a helpful interest in all organizations which will in
any way improve local conditions or elevate the standard of the
community, having nearly always been officially connected with such. He
has ever been loyal and public-spirited, his high ideals of citizenship
making his influence felt throughout the community.
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 358-361.
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