Biography of Isaac Davis
Memorial Record of Southwestern Minnesota, 1897, Lewis Publishing Company, Chicago, Illinois
ISAAC DAVIS
Isaac Davis, one of the highly respected pioneer citizens of Lesueur
county, Minnesota, is a Canadian by birth and comes of ancestry which is
traced back to the Welsh and French. He was ushered into life near
Montreal, Canada, March 20, 1835.
Orange Davis, his father, was born in Canada, the son of a Welsh father
and American mother, and passed his youth and early manhood on a farm in
that dominion. He was united in marriage there to Miss Adalaide Barlow,
who like himself was a native of Canada, her parents being William Barlow
and wife, the latter a French woman. In 1838 Orange Davis and family left
their home in the British province of Canada and sought a new location in
the United States, making the journey by the lake, canal and river to Pike
county, Illinois, that being before there was a railroad within the
borders of that great state which has now a perfect network of railway
lines. He settled near Pittsfield, where he improved a farm and where he
resided until 1853, at that time coming up into Minnesota and locating on
one hundred and fifty-seven acres of land near Lake Emily, where he
developed a fine farm. The last two years of his life were spent in St.
Peter, where he died at the age of seventy-five years. His good wife
lived to be eighty. They were members of the United Brethren Church,
stood high in the several communities in which they lived and enjoyed the
confidence and esteem of all who knew them. His whole life was devoted to
agricultural pursuits, and in politics he harmonized with the Republican
party. They were the parents of eleven children, namely: Thomas,
deceased; S. W., of St. Peter, Minnesota; Orange R., deceased; Isaac,
deceased; Ebenezer, of Kasota, Minnesota; Louisa, wife of Alexander
Pettis, of Kasota township, Lesueur county, Minnesota; Isaac, the second
in the family to be given this name and the subject of this review; Sarah,
wife of S. H. Pettis; Carline Hartew, of North Dakota; Harriet, deceased;
and H. C., of this township.
Having thus briefly referred to his ancestry, we turn now for an outline
of the life of Isaac Davis. He was reared on his father's farm in Pike
county, Illinois, and received his education by attending the public
schools, by home study and by actual business experience. He was nineteen
at the time they moved to Minnesota, and he remained a member of the home
circle until his marriage, which important event in his life was
consummated in December, 1855, the lady of his choice and whom he wedded
being Miss Catharine Pettis. She was born near Warren, Trumbull county,
Ohio, a daughter of New England parents and a representative of a family
long resident in this county and prominent and influential. Her father
Charles Pettis, was a son of Col. Stephen Pettis, of the war of 1812; was
born in Vermont, became a pioneer of eastern Ohio, and from there moved to
Pike county, Illinois. Her mother, whose maiden name was Sarah Horsford,
was a native of Connecticut, and a member of a prominent early family of
that state. Charles and Sarah Pettis were parents of nine children, viz.:
Stephen, Catharine, John, Eliza, Olive, Malissa, Emily, Charles and Henry.
The father of this family was by occupation a farmer and carpenter and in
his political views was a Republican. He died at the age of forty-eight
years. The mother lived to be seventy-four, a member of the Advent
Church, and a deeply religious woman.
After his marriage young Davis and his bride began housekeeping in a
little log cabin on a forty-acre tract of land, were industrious and
frugal, and as a result of their early years of toil are now in possession
of a competency and are surrounded with all the comforts and many of the
luxuries of life. Today he is the owner of three hundred acres of land,
one of the finest farms in the community; has a commodious and attractive
residence, beautiful for situation and surroundings; large barn, sixty-
five by fifty-four feet in dimensions, built on rock foundation; modern
windmill for pumping water for house and stock,-in short, a model farm.
Mr. and Mrs. Davis had twelve children, of whom nine are living, namely:
William, Winslow, Charles, Clarence, Edith Glover, George, Cordelia, John
and Harry. Edith Glover and Cordelia are engaged in teaching. The three
deceased were Orville, who died at the age of twenty-eight; Earnest, at
six months; and Stephen at four months.
Mr. Davis is a member of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows and
affiliates with the lodge at St. Peter. Mrs. Davis, like her mother, is a
devoted Christian woman and holds to the creed of the Advent Church.
(pages 414-415)
Contributed by Doug Peterson