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J. F. Proctor |
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J.F. Proctor, farmer, section 24, Hersey Township, was born Aug. 6, 1834, in
Barton Township, Orleans Co., Vt. He is
the son of Dan and Augusta (Mason) Proctor. His father was born Feb. 14,
1807, in Manchester, Eng., and emigrated to
the United States in 1820. He first located in Boston, Mass., and removed
thence to Craftsbury, Orleans Co., Vt.,
setting up his business there as a blacksmith. He owned a small farm in
Michigan, whither he removed in 1849, and died
Feb. 28, 1855, in Keene, IOnia County. The mother was born in Craftsbury,
Vt., Feb. 15, 1804, and died at the home of
her son, Sept. 30, 1883. Cynthia M., Alfred A., J.F., Helen E. and Benjamin
Franklin, their five children are all
living.
Mr. Proctor was married soon after becoming of age, and settled in an
unorganized portion of Montcalm Co., Mich., when
he removed, Jan. 1, 1856, to section 16, Crystal Township, together with his
eldest brother. They each made a claim of
40 acres of land, on which Mr. Proctor remained six years, and removed to
North Shade, Gratiot Co., Mich. Three years
later he made another transfer of his home and family, to Hubbardston, Ionia
County. Not long afterward he embarked in
the grocery trade at Matherton, combing that business with hotel-keeping and
conducting both about one year. His
venture turned disasterous, and as he suffered almost total loss of his
resources except his ability to labor, he
engaged as head-sawyer in the mill of Cogswell & Aldrich, with whom he
operated in that capacity three years. He next
managed a saw-mill at Langston, MOntcalm County, three years, and in the
spring of 1872 he came to Hersey and operated
as head-sawyer, scaler and fore man in the lumber camps of D.A. Blodgett. In
the spring of 1875 he took possession of
the arm on which he has since pursued his agricultural interests, and he also
for some years continued the work of
scaling, prosecuting that business eight winters. He owns 120 acres of land,
on which there was a small improvement
when he took possession. He has passed three winters near Harrison, Clare
County, acting as foreman in the shingle-mill
of D. F. Diggins, and removed his family there.
In the fall of 1863 Mr. Proctor was drafted into the Union service from
Gratiot County, but on reporting at Corunna,
shiawassee County, was released being the only dependence of his widowed
mother. The law was afterward changed, and he
determined to enlist, as he considered the prospects of his being again
drafted were more than likely to be realized.
He decided to enroll in the third Michigan Infantry. On meeting the
recruiting officer at Pewamo, he stated his
circumstances, his large family, and the necessity of his presence to secure
their well-being. the officer informed him
that he could enlist him and administer an oath in such cases made and
provided, give him custody of his papers, and
should he be drafted he could report for duty to the regiment as an enlisted
man. He escaped the draft, and the
necessity never arose.
Mr. Proctor was married Sept. 16, 1855, to Mary W. Smith, and they have eight
living children, and four deceased. Fred
was born Jan. 21, 1857; Frank, March 7, 1858; Charlie, Jan. 5, 1860; Dan, Aug.
25, 1861; Viola, April 14, 1863 (died
March 19, 1864); Clyde, born Jan. 12, 1865, died May 13, 1882); Louisa was
born April 11, 1867; Willie, March 17, 1870;
Ralph, Feb. 28, 1872 (died March 3d following); Verne, born May 13, 1873, died
Sept. 25, 1875; Albert E., April 11,
1877. Mrs. Proctor was born May 23, 1833, in Novi, Oakland Co., Mich., and is
the oldest of four children born to her
parents. She has one brother and two sisters - Edgar, Abigail R. and Emily.
Her father and mother, A.C. and Lorinda
(Simmons) Smith, reside at Easton, Ionia County, where the former is a citizen
of prominence. He has served several
terms as Sheriff, and has been County Surveyor some years.
Mr. Proctor is present Supervisor (1884) of his township. In political
opinion he is a Democrat.
His paternal grandfather was in somewhat straitened circumstances in England,
and leaving his family there, all save his
oldest son, he set out with him in a sailing vessel for the United States.
Adverse winds drove them into the Northern
Ocean among the icebergs, where their food gave out and they were in danger of
starvation as well as shipwreck. But
other vessels in the same vicinity, with more abundant stores, shared with
them, and afte six months of storm and stress
they landed in Nova Scotia. The senior Proctor was a blacksmith and moreover
was bent on proceeding to the United
States, but was deterred by an English law enacted after the war of 1812,
prohibiting mechanics belonging by nativity to
Great Britain from going to the States. He fixed his location as near the
boundary line as he could, and under cover of
becoming a permanent settler he took up 200 acres of land, on which he settled
and commenced active life as a
blacksmith. After a year he succeeded in getting on board an American sloop
with his tools, but he was discovered by
the British authorities and all the most valuable of his equipment was
confiscated, leaving him only the commonest sort
of an outfit to commence his work of carving out ways and means to secure the
comfort and presence of his family. A
month later he succeeded in his purpose and reached Boston. He went thence to
Lowell, in the Old Bay State, where he
produced the first lace-making machinery in this country.
His maternal grandmother, Mrs. Mason, was a descendant of the Howards, whose
names are associated with the earliest
colonial history of Massachusetts.
His grandfather, Elder Mason, was the first Baptist clergyman in Craftsbury,
Vt. At the date of his settlement there,
the most primitive methods of travel prevailed, and he once drew his wife on a
hand-sled nearly 50 miles, she carrying
in her arms their oldest child.
The portraits of Mr. and Mrs. Proctor appear on other pages. That of Mr.
Proctor is especially valuable to this volume,
as he represents the elements on which this country was founded and which has
perpetuated its institutions. He is a
pioneer by inheritance and in his own experience.
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