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Descendants of Enoch Barlow

... son of ADAM ...

~Virginia ~ Kentucky ~ Indiana~

Germanna Branch of Barlows     "unsere vielen Verbindungen"
James E. Barlow

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Generation 1
1.
ENOCH BARLOW1 was born August 18, 1777 in Culpeper, Virginia, and died September 07, 1838 in Washington Township, Hendricks Co Indiana.

He married JANE SELLERS September 20, 1804 in Bourbon Co Kentucky. JANE was born about 1774, died June 16, 1850 in Washington Township, Hendricks Co Indiana.    Both are buried in Barlow Cemetery, Hendricks Co Indiana.
Enoch Barlow Gravestone
Enoch' occupation was carpenter and a joiner          Also of interest: Enoch Barlow property auctioned in November 2000
Children of ENOCH BARLOW and JANE SELLERS are:
  ELIZABETH F. BARLOW2, born June 23, 1805, Kentucky, and died July 08, 1863, Washington Township, Hendricks Co Indiana, burial in Barlow Cemetery, Hendricks Co Indiana
She married GIDEON HUFFORD, December 28, 1829, Hendricks Co Indiana.
2. MILTON FRY BARLOW, born December 27, 1806, Scott Co Kentucky, and died 1851, Greencastle, Indiana.
3. JOHN S. BARLOW, born September 16, 1808.
  MARGARET S. BARLOW, born April 01, 1810.
  RUTH JANE BARLOW, born February 12, 1812.     She married ROBERT MARTIN, October 27, 1831, Hendricks Co Indiana.
  ENOCH P. BARLOW, born June 30, 1814.
  JAMES S. BARLOW, born November 28, 1815.
4. HARVEY RICE BARLOW, born April 01, 1818 Scott Co Kentucky, and died August 05, 1872, Brownsburg, Indiana
5. THEOPHILUS HARRISON BARLOW, born February 01, 1820, Harrison Co Kentucky, and died June 06, 1913, Brownsburg, Indiana.
  AARON M. BARLOW, born October 15, 1822.
  MARY W. BARLOW, born July 02, 1826, Scott Co Kentucky.
Generation 2
2. MILTON FRY BARLOW2 (ENOCH1) was born December 27, 1806 in Scott Co Kentucky, and died 1851 Greencastle, Indiana.     He married ANGELINE KNIGHT November 21, 1833 in Putnam Co Indiana.
He was listed as a hatter in the 1850 census for Greencastle, Putnam Co Indiana.
Children of MILTON BARLOW and ANGELINE KNIGHT are:
  MARTHA S. BARLOW3, born 1836
  ELIZABETH F. BARLOW, born 1838
  JAMES H. BARLOW, born 1840
  MILTON THEODORE BARLOW, born January 31, ____ , and died July 01, 1930.    He married SARAH MCCLINTOCK, November 1894.
 
3. JOHN S. BARLOW2 (ENOCH1) was born September 16, 1808       He married MARTHA HANNA CRAIG June 02, 1831 in Montgomery Co Indiana.
Children of JOHN S. BARLOW and MARTHA CRAIG are:
  MARGARET JANE BARLOW3, born 1832, and died 1900
  MARY BARLOW, born 1838, and died 1874
 
4.
HARVEY RICE BARLOW2 (ENOCH1) was born April 01, 1818 in Scott Co Kentucky, and died August 05, 1872 in Brownsburg, Indiana

He married SARAH JANE SMITH August 13, 1840 Hendricks Co Indiana. SARAH was born December 08, 1822 in Henry Co Kentucky, and died March 21, 1896 in Brownsburg, Indiana.  Both are buried in burial Barlow Cemetery, Hendricks Co Indiana
Sarah Barlow Grave
Children of HARVEY BARLOW and SARAH SMITH are:
 
  • Fact 1: Captain of a company of state volunteers
  • Fact 2: came to Indiana at age 10 from Kentucky
  • Fact 3: Had two months formal schooling but became a good teacher
  • Fact 4: built the first saw and grist mills in Hendricks County
  • Fact 5: Was a farmer in Brown Township
Harvey Barlow
From the booklet:



“History of James Smith and His Children”     Published September 04, 1908


Excerpt covers Sarah Jane Smith 1822-1896 and Harvey Rice Barlow 1818-1872


Sarah, being the oldest daughter, early learned to help her mother with the housework and to spin and weave. At that time it was the women’s work not only to make the garments, but also to spin and weave the material. Besides making their own, and the boys’ and men’s clothes they spun their bed and table linen and wove their blankets and carpets. Aside from the many home duties, Sarah found time to mingle with the young people of the neighborhood and entertain many suitors. She was a very beautiful girl, with a sweet, quiet dignity of manner, which caused her to be much sought after by the young men of her acquaintance. At the age of eighteen she gave her hand to the young schoolmaster, Harvey R. Barlow. They went to housekeeping in a cabin near the schoolhouse, on the land afterwards owned by her brother, Alex. Soon after they moved onto a farm, known as the Worrell farm, and later to one about a mile north of the White Lick Presbyterian Church.
Sarah Barlow
Not long after locating here a sad misfortune befell them. It was on the third of September, 1859, while the family was away at church, robbers entered the house and after plundering it, set it on fire, completely destroying the building and all its contents, leaving the family in very destitute circumstances. Their neighbors and friends at once rallied to their aid, and with liberal donations of material and help soon restored to them a larger and more comfortable house than the one destroyed. They also supplied them with sufficient food and clothing to keep them from suffering through the winter. Here they lived until the spring of 1868, when they traded for a farm in Iowa.

In April of that year they moved. Their son James (James Milton Barlow) took the household goods through in a wagon, the rest of the family going by rail as far as Des Moines, this being the terminus of the railroad at that time. Here they were met by the wagon and proceeded to their destination, Indianolia, Warren County. Being dissatisfied with this location, in the fall of the same year they returned by wagon to Indiana. On their way back they visited her brother, George, in Missouri. They again settled on the farm which they had left in the spring, living here in comfortable circumstances until the death of her husband. After which she took up the responsibility of providing for herself and children.

Although this burden was a heavy one she bore it bravely and patiently. The children were soon stimulated by the zeal of the kind and loving mother to join heartily with her in earning a support for themselves. So, by the products of the mother’s loom and the harvest from the fields, they lived happily together, until the children were able to provide homes for themselves to which they welcomed their mother. Sarah was a very earnest Christian and for years a faithful worker in the White Lick Presbyterian Church, of which she was a charter member.

There were eight children. - see below
 
Children of HARVEY BARLOW and SARAH SMITH are:
  FIRSTBORN BARLOW3 born, and died 1841, burial in Barlow Cemetery, Hendricks Co Indiana
  HANNAH J.C. BARLOW, born 1842, and died May 29, 1845, Washington Township, Hendricks Co Indiana, burial in Barlow Cemetery, Hendricks Co Indiana
8. JAMES MILTON BARLOW, born September 13, 1845, Brownsburg, Indiana, and died August 26, 1922, Plainfield, Indiana
 
FOURTHBORN BARLOW, born October 25, 1841, Washington Township, Hendricks Co Indiana, and died November 01, 1841, Washington Township, Hendricks Co Indiana, burial in Barlow Cemetery, Hendricks Co Indiana
9. RUTH ANN BARLOW, born October 23, 1849, Washington Township, Hendricks Co Indiana, and died 1921, Indiana.
10. MYRA ALICE BARLOW, born September 14, 1855, Danville, Indiana.
11. HARRISON SMITH BARLOW, born October 15, 1860, Lincoln Township, Hendricks Co Indiana, and died July 02, 1925, Hendricks Co Indiana.
12. HARVEY MORTON BARLOW, born May 18, 1862, Danville, Indiana, and died December 09, 1933, Hendricks Co Indiana
 
5. THEOPHILUS HARRISON BARLOW2 (ENOCH1) was born February 01, 1820 in Harrison Co Kentucky, and died June 06, 1913 in Brownsburg, Indiana.

He married SUSAN A. MOBERLY August 24, 1842 in Hendricks Co Indiana.
 
  • Fact 1: Member of Presbyterian Church, served as an elder for 25 years
  • Fact 2: Member of the Brownsburg, Indiana, Lodge, No. 188, I.O.O.F.
  • Fact 3: Was a Republican
  • Fact 4: Was a very successful farmer in Brown Township
Theophilus H. Barlow was born in Harrison Co Kentucky, February 01, 1820, a son of Enoch and Jane Barlow. In 1828 his parents moved to Henricks Co Indiana, and settled in the northern part of Washington Township on land entered by his father in 1826. He is the only one living of a family of twelve children. He was reared and educated in Hendricks County, and is now one of the leading agriculturists of Lincoln Township. He owns 223 acres of land, all under cultivation, and his improvements are among the best in the township.

He was married August 24, 1842, to Susan A., daughter of John and Elizabeth Moberly, early settlers of Hendricks County. They have had eleven children, two of who are living Mary A., now Mrs. Robert Bell, of Brownsburg and Abbie Z. Mrs. Bell has nine children - Clyde W., Lloyd T., Ernest E. and Grace I. (twins), Nellie S., Charles H., Zoe M., Estelle C., and Clara P. Eliza J., wife of Aaron N. Crouch, died December 25, 1879, leaving three children -- Estella May, William H. and Joanah S. Enoch M. died March 06, 1870 aged twenty-two years. Gillum L. was killed by a run away team May 29, 1871, aged 10 years. Charles A. died February 01, 1881, aged sixteen years. Three died in infancy.

Mr. Barlow and his family are members of the Presbyterian church, which he has served as Elder twenty five years. He is a member of Brownsburg Lodge, No. 188, I.O.O.F. In politics he is a Republican.
Theophilus Barlow
 
Children of THEOPHILUS BARLOW and SUSAN MOBERLY are:
  THEOPHILIS P. BARLOW3, born 1844 and died October 04, 1863, Washington Township, Hendricks Co Indiana, burial in Barlow Cemetery, Hendricks Co Indiana
13. ELIZA J. BARLOW, born 1845, and died December 26, 1879, Washington Township, Hendricks Co Indiana, burial in Barlow Cemetery, Hendricks Co Indiana
  ENOCH M. BARLOW, born 1848, Washington Township, Hendricks Co Indiana, and died March 06, 1870, Washington Township, Hendricks Co Indiana, burial in Barlow Cemetery, Hendricks Co Indiana
  ABBIE Z. BARLOW, born after 1850, Hendricks Co Indiana, and died after 1885
14.
MARY ANN BARLOW, born June 06, 1851, Washington Township, Hendricks Co Indiana, and died January 16, 1887, Washington Township, Hendricks Co Indiana, burial in Barlow Cemetery, Hendricks Co Indiana
 
WILLIAM HARVEY BARLOW, born 1858, Washington Township, Hendricks Co Indiana, and died September 04, 1864, Washington Township, Hendricks Co Indiana, burial in Barlow Cemetery, Hendricks Co Indiana
 
GILLUM L. BARLOW, born 1861, Washington Township, Hendricks Co Indiana, and was killed by a team of runaway horses on May 29, 1871, Washington Township, Hendricks Co Indiana, burial in Barlow Cemetery, Hendricks Co Indiana
 
CHARLIE A. BARLOW, born in Washington Township, Hendricks Co Indiana, and died February 01, 1881, Washington Township, Hendricks Co Indiana, burial in Barlow Cemetery, Hendricks Co Indiana
 
ZOE M. BARLOW, born December 29, 1866, Washington Township, Hendricks Co Indiana and died September 26, 1888, Washington Township, Hendricks Co Indiana, burial in Barlow Cemetery, Hendricks Co Indiana
  Three other children died at birth
Generation 3
6. MARGARET JANE BARLOW3 (JOHN S.2, ENOCH1) was born 1832, and died 1900.

She married WILLIAM HYLTON September 19, 1850.
William Hylton was active in the Presbyterian Church, a deacon and elder. He served as a commissioner of Hendricks County for three years.
Children of MARGARET BARLOW and WILLIAM HYLTON are:
  ALICE THEODORA HYLTON4
  VIOLA HYLTON
  LILLIE BELLE HYLTON
  MARGARET HYLTON
  WILLIAM HARVEY HYLTON
  CHARLES WESLEY HYLTON, died November 18, 1884, Washington Township, Hendricks Co Indiana
  JOHN SAMUEL HYLTON
  MARTHA HYLTON
  MARY JANE HYLTON
 
7. MARY BARLOW3 (JOHN S.2, ENOCH1) was born 1838, and died 1874.       She married 1) Mr. WATSON.       She married 2) JOHN MOORE 1866.
Child of MARY BARLOW and MR. WATSON is:
  MATILDA ALICE WATSON4 married JAMES S. HUFFMAN
Children of MARY BARLOW and JOHN MOORE are:
  FLORA BELLE MOORE4 married CHARLES HOSKINS
  EMMA LORAINE MOORE married Mr. HANKLEY
  MARGARET MOORE
 
8. JAMES MILTON BARLOW3 (HARVEY RICE2, ENOCH1) was born September 13, 1845 in Brownsburg, Indiana, and died August 26, 1922 in Plainfield, Indiana.

He married SARAH ELIZABETH HORNADAY May 17, 1871 in Avon, Indiana
 

Civil War Record

James Milton Barlow, Private, Co H 132nd IN Infantry, organized May 18, 1864 at Indianapolis Indiana, mustered out September 07, 1864.

Pension application no. 413062 filed December 13 1880, certificate no. 229172, resident Indiana.

Widow Sarah E. 'Hornaday' Barlow's pension application no. 1195861 filed October 26, 1922, certificate no. 926338, resident Indiana.

James Milton Barlow:

  • Fact 1: April 30, 1864, Enlisted Company H, 132nd Regiment, Indiana Volunteer Infantry
  • Fact 2: September 1864, Honorary Discharge
  • Fact 3: July 1864, Was in the Battle/Burning of Atlanta, Ga., receiving presidential recognition
  • Fact 4: Suffered seriously from malaria during campaign
  • Fact 5: School teacher, 1866-78
  • Fact 6: Traveling salesman
  • Fact 7: Farmer
  • Fact 8: GOP State Representative and Senator
  • Fact 9: Served as a justice of the peace
  • Fact 10: Attended Central Normal College, Wabash College

Sarah Elizabeth Hornaday:

  • Fact 1: Attended Danville (Indiana) Normal College
  • Fact 2: Died in the home of her daughter, Mrs. Fred Breelove
  • Fact 3: Buried in Maple Hill Cemetery, Plainfield, Indiana
A Portrait and Biographical Record of Boone, Clinton, and Hendricks Counties, Indiana. 


Chicago, A.W. Bowen and Co., 1895 pp. 1033-1035


James M. Barlow, one of the substantial farmers of Washington Township, an old soldier of the Civil War, and an experienced educator, was born in Washington Township, Hendricks County, Indiana, September 13, 1845. His father was Harvey Rice Barlow, who married Sarah J.'Smith' Barlow.

He was from an old American family, of Irish and Dutch descent, (see note) and came from Georgetown, Kentucky, and settled in Washington Township, Hendricks County, Indiana, in 1827, with his father, Enoch Barlow, when but nine years of age. Enoch as a carpenter and joiner by trade, and a farmer and original pioneer, and well known.

His wife was Jane Seller, was a leader in the Presbyterian Church, and was a preacher in the First Baptist Church of this county, and was foremost in establishing Sunday-schools. She died in 1850, June 06, aged seventy-six years.

Mr. Barlow was the first one buried in Washington Township. He died in 1837. Harvey R. Barlow entered land in what is now known as Lincoln Township, and was one of the first settlers of Washington Township, having no neighbors nearer than five miles.

In politics he was a Republican and abolitionist.

He was a member of the Presbyterian Church, in which he was an elder many years.

He reared a family of five children: James M., Ruth A., Myra A., Harrison S., and Harvey M., all born in Hendricks County, Indiana. Mr. Barlow lived to be fifty-four years old and died, August 05, 1872.
James Milton Barlow
Jim Barlow ... great grandson of James Milton Barlow writes:

The biography notes J.M.'s "Dutch and Irish" descent. Well, the Dutch probably should read German to reflect his relationship as a descendant of Virginia immigrant Christopher Parlur/Barlow.

This biography was published in a Hendricks County Indiana history book, and reflects even my own family's long-time lack of knowledge of, or unwillingness to accept, its roots to Germany. There has been a lot of published history that even referred to many of Germanna II's members as Dutch -- even the Hebron Lutheran Church was called the old Dutch church in one often-cited book. But virtually all colony members have been more accurately traced through parish and other community records to Baden-Wurtenburg, Germany.

As for the Irish roots, that is accurate. James Milton's grandmother, Jane Sellers, is from a pretty well documented line from Northern Ireland. James M.'s mother, Sarah Smith, had Scottish blood through her immigrant father, who died at Sarah's house in Hendricks County.
Honorable James Milton Barlow
Page 22: A Biographical Directory of the Indiana General Assembly - Volume 2, 1901-1984


It is a pleasure to investigate the career of a successful, self made man. Great honor attaches to that individual who, beginning the great struggle of life alone and unaided, gradually overcomes environment, removing one by one, the obstacles in the pathway of success, and by the master strokes of his own force and vitality succeeds in forging his way to the front and winning for himself a position of esteem and influence among his fellow men. Such is the life, briefly stated, of James M. Barlow for several decades recognized as one of the most substantial and representative citizens of Hendricks County, to a brief synopsis of whose life and character the readers attention is herewith directed.

His life and the history of this locality for a period of nearly half a century has been pretty nearly one and the same, and he has lived to see and take a prominent part in the later growth of the community. He is a progressive man in the broadest sense of the term. Realizing the wants of the people, he has tried to supply the demands of his constituents generously and unsparingly. His has been a life of honor and trust, and no higher eulogy can be passed upon him than to state the simple truth that his name has never been coupled with anything disreputable, nor has there been the shadow of a stain upon his reputation for his integrity and unwavering honesty. He has been a consistent man in all that he has undertaken, and his career in the various relations of life has been utterly without pretense. Because of his earnest life, high attainments, well rounded character and large influence, he is largely entitled to representation in a work of this character.

James Milton Barlow was born September 13, 1845 in Washington Township, Hendricks Co, Indiana, and is the son of Harvey R. and Sarah E. (Smith) Barlow, the former born April 01, 1818, in Scott County, Kentucky, and the latter born in Henry County, Kentucky, December 08, 1822. To these parents were born eight children, four sons and four daughters, of whom four still survive, namely: the first born died in infancy; Hannah Jane C. died in early youth; James M., the subject of this sketch was next in order of birth; Ruth Ann lives in Marion County; a daughter, who died in infancy; Mrs. Myra Alice Medsker died at the age of forty years, leaving a husband and eight children; Harrison S. of Brownsburg, Indiana; and Harvey Morton of Brownsburg. The subject's paternal grandfather, Enoch Barlow, was the son of a Revolutionary soldier and he himself was one of the early settlers in Scott County, Kentucky, is birth having occurred in Virginia. Eventually he moved to Indiana and in September, 1828, settled near Brownsburg where he spent the remainder of his days, his death occurring in November, 1837. He was survived a number of years by his widow, who died on June 16, 1856. They were the parents of eleven children, seven sons and four daughters. Harvey R. Barlow was a man of considerable prominence in his community and was captain of a company of state volunteers. Harvey R. came to Indiana at the age of ten years at the time of his fathers death and took upon himself the management of the home farm. He was of necessity deprived of educational advantages, two months comprising the entire period of his attendance at school. However, he was of a studious disposition and by the most persistent efforts acquired a splendid education, so that for many years he was enabled to teach school to the entire satisfaction of parents and pupils. His death occurred on August 5, 1872. His wife, whose maiden name was Sarah J. Smith, and who was a native of Kentucky, died at the age of seventy-three years. She came to this state in 1837, and was a woman of splendid qualities of character, an ardent Presbyterian and rearing her children in that faith. In the early life of Hendricks County, Harvey Barlow was prominent and progressive in his methods, having built the first saw- and grist-mill in the county. He was a man of strong character and forceful personality, and in the community where he lived, he was held in high esteem.

James M. Barlow received his elementary education in the public schools, and then became a student in Wabash College. On April 30, 1864, when but eighteen years of age, he enlisted in Company H, One Hundred and Thirty-Second Regiment, Indiana Volunteer Infantry, with which he rendered valiant service until receiving an honorable discharge in September 1864. He took part in a number of hotly contested engagements and arduous campaigns, and received a certificate of thanks from President Lincoln and Secretary of War, Edwin H. Stanton, for valuable services rendered by him during the Atlanta campaign. Mr. Barlow has been a very active man, and at the close of the war, he went on the road as a traveling salesman for Powers & Weeks, lithographers of Cincinnati, Ohio, with whom he remained for two years. He then engaged in teaching school, and was thus employed in twenty-two different schools, gaining an enviable reputation as a professional teacher and good administrative officer. For a while, he also gave some attention to auctioneering, in which he was successful, and also owned and operated a butcher shop in Brownsburg, and also a drug store. Then he was employed as bookkeeper for a firm in Pittsboro, in which position he gained a good, practical experience. In young manhood, by rigid economy and wise management, he succeeded in acquiring a small farm, which he operated with such good success that he was enabled to add to it from time to time, until at length, he became the owner of seven hundred acres of fine farming land, of which he has given four hundred to his children, owning now, three hundred acres of land. Aside from his farming interests, Mr. Barlow is identifed with the Van Camp Packing Company of Indianapolis. Strong and forceful in his relations with his fellow men, he has gained the good will and commendation of all with whom he has been brought in contact, ever retaining his reputation among men for integrity and high character, and never losing that dignity which is the birthright of a gentleman. The splendid success which came to Mr. Barlow has been directly traceable to the salient points in his character, for he started in life at the bottom of the ladder, which he mounted unaided. He is a splendid example of the virile, progressive, self-made man, who believes in doing well whatever is worth doing at all.

Politically, a Republican, Mr. Barlow has for many years been active in public affairs, and has been an important and influential factor in many movements for the welfare of the state. In 1897 and 1899, he was representative from Hendricks County, and in 1901-2-3, he was a member of the Senate, representing the district of Boone and Hendricks Counties. In these bodies his ability was recognized and he wa placed on several of the most important committees. He was chairman of the agriculture committee, chairman on the committee for reformatory institutions, and on a number of other committees in both bodies. He served his community as justice of peace for four years, and a noteworthy feature of his administration of his office was that he was influential in having many cases settled out of court, thus saving useless litigation and expense. His decisions as justice of peace were marked by a high sense of fairness and justice, never having a decision reversed in the higher courts. Fraternally, Mr. Barlow has been a member of Lodge No. 188, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, for forty-eight years. He is also a member of the Improved Order of Red Men, Lodge No. 167, and at present, a member of Post No. 186, Grand Army of the Republic. He was charter member of John A. Hollett, Post No. 182, Grand Army of the Republic. In the Knights of Pythias, Mr. Barlow has been quite prominent, having taken an active part in the organization of the Uniform Rank, being elected major of the First Battalion, First Regiment, this being the first regiment ever organized in this body, and the first and oldest regiment in the world. Mr. Barlow served as chief of staff of Commander in Chief, Thomas A. Stewart of Pennsylvania, when the Grand Army of the Republic met at San Francisco, and has for many years been prominent in the various councils of this veteran organization. For twenty years, Mr. Barlow served as president of the Old Settlers' Picnic, one of the popular and prominent organizations of Hendrick County, an annual feature of which was an address given by the governor of the state. Religiously, Mr. Barlow has for many years been a faithful and earnest member of the Presbyterian church, of which he is an elder, and in 1903 was one of the delegates from Indiana to the general assembly of the church which met at Philadelphia. Mr. Barlow is a public spirited man in all that the term implies and is actively interested in enterprises tending to promote the general welfare, withholding his support from no movement for the good of the locality honored by his residence. His personal relations with his fellow men have been mutually pleasant and agreeable, and he is highly regarded by all, being easily approached, obliging and straightforward in all relations of life.

On May 17, 1871, Mr. Barlow was married to Sarah E. Hornaday, a daughter of Isaiah Hornaday, a farmer of Washington Township, this county, and was one of eight children, five of whom are now living. To this union have been born eight children: William E. of Minneapolis, a teacher in the public schools, having charge of the manual training department in the South high school. He is married and the father of four children: Henry Dickerson, a farmer on the old homestead in Washington Township, has four children living: Walter Harvey, a farmer in Guilford Township; has four children; Myrtle of Plainfield who married Fred Breedford, a merchant of that city; Virgil M., who lives in Missouri, married Edith Anderson; Albert Paul of Plainfield, a merchant, married Marie Hollingsworth; Harrison Porter, who died at the age of three years; and Mary S., the youngest in order of birth, who is attending college at Terre Haute, Indiana.
 
Children of JAMES BARLOW and SARAH HORNADAY are:
15. WILLIAM ELLIOTT BARLOW4, born February 13, 1872, Brownsburg, Indiana, and died December 12, 1957
16. HENRY DICKERSON BARLOW, born September 09, 1874, Brownsburg, Indiana, and died May 23, 1951, Plainfield, Indiana.
17. WALTER HARVEY BARLOW, born July 19, 1877, Brownsburg, Indiana, and died August 13, 1943, Plainfield, Indiana.
18. ELSIE MYRTLE BARLOW, born March 24, 1880, Brownsburg, Indiana
19. VIRGIL MILTON BARLOW, born October 30, 1882, Brownsburg, Indiana, and died July 05, 1959, Little Rock, Pulaski Co Arkansas.
  JAMES W. BARLOW, born November 29, 1882
20. ALBERT PAUL BARLOW, born July 25, 1885, Brownsburg, Indiana, and died June 30, 1928, Plainfield, Indiana.
  HARRISON PORTER BARLOW, born April 27, 1888, Plainfield, Indiana, and died January 11, 1892, Plainfield, Indiana.
  JAMES M. BARLOW, born April 27, 1888.
21. MARY SOPHRONIA BARLOW, born November 29, 1890, Plainfield, Indiana.
 
9. RUTH ANN BARLOW3 (HARVEY RICE2, ENOCH1) was born October 23, 1849 in Washington Township, Hendricks Co Indiana, and died 1921 in Indiana

She married 1) LEVI W. OSBORN.      She married 2) JOHN W. REED May 31, 1866 in Hendricks Co Indiana.    Ruth and Levi are buried in Barlow Cemetery, Hendricks Co Indiana
Child of RUTH BARLOW and LEVI OSBORN is:
  IRA M. OSBORN4, born 1887, and died 1906, burial in Barlow Cemetery, Hendricks Co Indiana
 
10. MYRA ALICE BARLOW3 (HARVEY RICE2, ENOCH1) was born September 14, 1855 in Danville, Indiana, and died c1895, leaving 8 children.

She married JAMES M. MEDSKER April 14, 1880 in Hendricks Co Indiana.
Children of MYRA BARLOW and JAMES MEDSKER are:
  ALPHA G. MEDSKER4
  EVA M. MEDSKER
  ROBERT L. MEDSKER
  FEMALE MEDSKER, born December 25, 1882
  MALE MEDSKER, born November 20, 1884
  MALE MEDSKER, born April 17, 1886
  FEMALE MEDSKER, born August 31, 1888
  JAMES E. MEDSKER, born August 06, 1890
 
11. HARRISON SMITH BARLOW3 (HARVEY RICE2, ENOCH1) was born October 15, 1860 in Lincoln Township, Hendricks Co Indiana, and died July 02, 1925 in Hendricks Co Indiana.

He married EMMA B. FOGLEMAN March 15, 1882 in Hendricks Co Indiana.
 
History of Hendricks County, Indiana: Her People, Industries and Institutions"
by John V. Hadley, Editor & Publisher, 1914

To a great extent the prosperity of the agricultural sections of our country is due to the honest industry, the sturdy persistence, the unswerving perseverance and the wise economy which so prominently characterize the farming element of the Hoosier state. Among this class may be mentioned the subject of this life record who, by reason of years of indefatigable labor and honest effort, has not only acquired a well merited material prosperity, but also richly earned the highest esteem of all with whom he is associated. Harrison Smith Barlow is a native of this county, having been born in Lincoln township, about three miles southwest of Brownsburg, on October 15, 1860, the son of Harvey Rice and Sarah Jane (Smith) Barlow. Sarah Smith was a native of the state of Kentucky and came to Indiana while young and it is thought possible that Harvey Rice Barlow also came from the same place. Sarah Smith's father, whose wife was named Hannah, entered a tract of land from the government, this land lying near Danville, this county. There they lived a number of years, the mother dying while Sarah was still a small child. After his marriage, Harvey Rice Barlow purchased land in Washington township and there he built a saw and grist-mill, which was run by water power. He later traded this business and farm for a tract of land about three miles south of Brownsburg and there passed the remainder of his life, his death occurring in 1872. The mother died in 1896. It was on this farm that the subject of this sketch first saw the light of day, being one of a family of seven children. He remained under the parental roof until the time of his marriage, when he purchased the farm where he was born. About 1902 or 1904, Mr. Barlow sold the old homestead and purchased a farm some two miles southwest of Brownsburg, where he lived for some six or eight years, when he purchased his present farm of fifty-two acres something over a mile northwest of Brownsburg. Here he carried on general farming and its kindred interests. At one time, Mr. Barlow gave particular attention to the raising of fancy vegetables, always having an elaborate display at both the state and county fairs.

On March 15, 1882, Mr. Barlow was united in marriage with Emma B. Fogleman, a native of North Carolina and the daughter of William and Elizabeth (Ferguson) Fogleman, her birth occurring about 1865. Elizabeth Ferguson, her mother, was a daughter of Archibald and Sarah Ferguson. William Fogleman left his original home in North Carolina and removed to Missouri when Mrs. Barlow was a child of three years. They lived there some three years and then came eastward again, stopping in Indiana, where they located in Hendricks county, in the town of Plainfield. Mr. Fogleman was a carpenter by trade, and both he and his wife died when Emma B. was fifteen years old, she being one of a family of three children. After the death of her parents, she was taken into the home of William Hadley, a brother of Judge Hadley, and remained there until the time of her marriage.

Mrs. and Mrs. Barlow have had three children, one of whom Charley Ambrose, died when thirteen years of age. Gertie, a daughter is the wife of Wilbur Lowder and they have two children, Herbert and Annis. Their home is about one mile north of that of the subject. The other child, Clara William, married Willis Pruitt and they live on a farm in Marion county, about seven miles northwest of the city of Indianapolis.

Politically, Mr. Barlow has always been identified with the Republican party, taking an active interest in its campaigns. He served a road supervisor for twelve years, and during that time did much to improve the highways of the county. His religious connection is with the Presbyterian church, both he and his wife being members of same and taking an active interest in the society, contributing of both time and means to further the cause. His fraternal affiliation is with the Independent Order of Odd Fellows and the Knights of Pythias, in the work of which societies he takes a keen interest, and Mrs. Barlow is a member of the women's degrees of these orders, being both a Daughter of Rebekah and a Pythian Sister. She also belongs to the Woman's Relief Corps.

There is much that is commendable in Mr. Barlow's life record, for he has been found true to duty in every relation, where of a public or private character, and while energy and untiring industry have been salient features of his business career, he is equally well known for his uprightness and the honorable methods he has always followed and for his loyalty to any trust imposed in him. Because of his genial and unassuming disposition and his genuine worth, he enjoys a well deserved popluarity throughout his county.
 
Children of HARRISON BARLOW and EMMA FOGLEMAN are:
  CHARLEY AMBROSE BARLOW4, born February 11, 1883, Hendricks Co Indiana, and died August 23, 1896, Hendricks Co Indiana.
  HARVEY BARLOW, born February 11, 1883
  MALE BARLOW, born February 11, 1883
22. GERTRUDE LEE BARLOW, born March 29, 1886.
  H.S. BARLOW, born March 29, 1886.
  CLARA WILLIAM BARLOW, born April 07, 1889     She married WILLIS W. PRUITT.
  HARRISON S. BARLOW, born April 07, 1889
 
12. HARVEY MORTON BARLOW3 (HARVEY RICE2, ENOCH1) was born May 18, 1862 in Danville, Indiana, and died December 09, 1933 in Hendricks Co Indiana.

He married 1) GEORGIA A. GARNER May 03, 1885 in Hendricks Co Indiana.       He married 2) ANGIE N. CRAVER February 03, 1907 in Hendricks Co Indiana.
Children of HARVEY BARLOW and GEORGIA GARNER are:
  VERNON BARLOW4, born May 13, 1885, Hendricks Co Indiana, and died January 1970.    He married ESTHER KENNEDY
  BARKER B. BARLOW, born January 05, 1887.    He married NORA E. WALLS, February 18, 1908, Hendricks Co Indiana.
  HORACE M. BARLOW, born April 17, 1892, Hendricks Co Indiana, and died April 01, 1906, Hendricks Co Indiana.
  H.W. BARLOW, born April 17, 1892.
  H. MORTON BARLOW, born May 13, 1895
23. ORIN GARNER BARLOW, born April 01, 1900, Hendricks Co Indiana, and died March 29, 1979, Brownsburg, Indiana.
 
13. ELIZA J. BARLOW3 (THEOPHILUS HARRISON2, ENOCH1) was born 1845, and died December 26, 1879 in Washington Township, Hendricks Co Indiana, burial in Barlow Cemetery, Hendricks Co Indiana

She married AARON N. CROUCH October 13, 1870 in Hendricks Co Indiana.
Children of ELIZA BARLOW and AARON CROUCH are:
  ESTELLA MAY CROUCH4, born about 1871.     She married ELMER E. MCCRARY.
  WILLIAM H. CROUCH, born about 1873, Indiana, and died after December 10, 1948, Hendricks Co Indiana.    He married JENNIE GRAHAM
24. SUSAN JANE CROUCH, born about 1877
 
14.
MARY ANN BARLOW3 (THEOPHILUS HARRISON2, ENOCH1) was born June 06, 1851 in Washington Township, Hendricks Co Indiana, and died in a house fire on January 16, 1887 in Washington Township, Hendricks Co Indiana, burial in Barlow Cemetery, Hendricks Co Indiana

She married ROBERT BELL September 26, 1868 in Hendricks Co Indiana.    ROBERT was born February 28, 1845 in Brownsburg (Lincoln Township), Indiana, and died April 07, 1929 in Brownsburg, Indiana.
Children of MARY BARLOW and ROBERT BELL are:
  INFANT DAUGHTER BELL4, born June 14, 1869, Washington Township, Hendricks Co Indiana, and died June 14, 1869, Washington Township, Hendricks Co Indiana
  CLYDE W. BELL
  LLOYD T. BELL
  ERNEST E. BELL, twin
  GRACE I. BELL, twin
  NELLIE S. BELL
  CHARLES H. BELL
  ZOE M. BELL
 
ESTELLE C. BELL, born c1893, and died from burns sustained in a house fire that killed her mother, November 02, 1887, Washington Township, Hendricks Co Indiana, burial in Barlow Cemetery, Hendricks Co Indiana
 
CLARA P. BELL, born c1895, and died from burns sustained in a house fire that killed her mother, December 25, 1887, Washington Township, Hendricks Co Indiana, burial in Barlow Cemetery, Hendricks Co Indiana
Generation 4
15. WILLIAM ELLIOTT BARLOW4 (JAMES MILTON3, HARVEY RICE2, ENOCH1) was born February 13, 1872 in Brownsburg, Indiana, and died December 12, 1957.     He married ELLEN MEADE September 1900.
 
Milt Barlow
Jim Barlow writes:

I am seeking information / descendants of William Elliott Barlow, a son of my great-grandfather James Milton Barlow of Hendricks County, Indiana.   The family moved to the Minneapolis area, where they had a farm.   I met some of this family at a reunion at my parents' house in the mid 1950s, when I was a pup.   Any descendants out there, or does anyone know of any?


         <<<   Milton Barlow                                                                                                                  William Elliot Barlow >>>
William E. Barlow
 
Children of WILLIAM BARLOW and ELLEN MEADE are:
MILTON BARLOW5
LUCILLE BARLOW
MARY JANE BARLOW
 
 
 
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