James Edington Montgomery O'Hair

Is your surname O'Hair?

Connect to 3,849 O'Hair profiles on Geni

James Edington Montgomery O'Hair's Geni Profile

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

James Edington Montgomery O'Hair

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Mount Sterling, Montgomery County, Kentucky, United States
Death: July 24, 1899 (95)
Greencastle, Putnam County, Indiana, United States
Place of Burial: Brick Chapel, Putnam County, Indiana, United States
Immediate Family:

Son of Michael O'Hair, Sr. and Elizabeth O'Hair
Husband of Margaret O'Hair and Permelia O'Hair
Father of William Asbury O'Hair; James Ellsbury O'Hair; Greenberry Montgomery O'Hair; John Tribbett O'Hair; Eliza Jane O'Hair and 8 others
Brother of Sibby Lacey; John O'Hair; Eleanor Trimble; Nancy O'Hair; Michael O'Hair, Jr. and 5 others
Half brother of Thomas O'Hair; Sarah Miller; Catherine Katy O'hair and Elizabeth "Betsy" O'Hair

Managed by: Heather Jaffray
Last Updated:

About James Edington Montgomery O'Hair

James E. M. O'Hair - Margaret Montgomery Chromosome Map:
https://dnapainter.com/profile/view/5df80e499512caa9

O'Hair Family DNA-only Tree (WATO) :
https://dnapainter.com/tools/probability/view/70605cd39f1d59a4


Extract from Weik's History of Putnam County, Indiana by Jesse W. Weik. Published by B. F. Bowen & Company, Indianapolis, 1910.

".... The subject (James E. M. O'Hair) of this sketch was the fifth (should read sixth) child by the second marriage and was born July 5, 1804. In the year 1812 when he was eight years old, his father died. His mother survived her husband many years, her death occurring October 1, 1839, and at the home of her son in Putnam County, six miles from Greencastle. At the age of fifteen the boy went to live with James Montgomery near Mt. Sterling, Kentucky, and worked for his board and clothing for five years. During this time he went to school about three months each winter for four winters, obtaining thus all the school education he ever received. The schoolhouse was built of hewed logs with a large fireplace in one end, having split saplings with wooden legs for benches and greased paper for windowpanes.

At the age of twenty years, on March 5, 1825 the subject of this sketch was married to Miss Margaret Montgomery. In a few days thereafter, having loaded on a pack saddle all their household goods, consisting of two beds, three plates, two teacups, two knives, two forks, a gourd, a stew kettle and a skillet, the wife riding another horse and carrying with her all their wearing apparel and leading the pack-horse, and the husband following on foot, driving a cow and a colt which his father-in-law had given him, the young couple started for their new home in the wilds of Estill County, Kentucky, on the Kentucky river seventy-five miles away. They took two days for the journey. Arriving at his destination, the young farmer traded one horse for a claim of about twenty-five acres. This trade left him one mare, a colt, one cow, a young wife and not a dollar in his pocket. He at once determined to better his condition and own a large farm. The first year he cleared five acres of ground. He raised five crops on this place. All the iron he had for tending these crops was the point of his shovel plow and the bit in his horse's mouth. After he had raised one crop, his brother-in-law sold him eleven sows and pigs on credit for thirty dollars. He drove them home eighteen miles and turned them out on mast in the mountains, feeding them occasionally to keep them from running wild. That thirty dollars of debt worried him day and night and he was determined to pay it. In order to do this he hunted coons on winter nights for their hides, which he sold for ten dollars, his wife spun yarn, wove cloth and made him an overcoat, which he concluded to do without in order that he might sell it for twenty dollars to pay his debt. He now had the thirty dollars he owed his brother-in-law and walked eighteen miles to pay it. He felt chagrined when on reaching the latter's house he refused to take the money, saying, "Now, James, I don't need that money and you do. You take it and buy some calves to take home with you." He did so, buying ten head, driving them home and turning them into the canebrakes.

CATCHING A PENITENT THIEF "The third year our subject lived in the mountains he met with a loss which led him into an interesting and almost fatal adventure. A young man came to him for work and he hired the applicant for the season. The second day after doing so, while he was away in the mountains looking after his hogs, the hired man stole the only suit of clothes he had, ten coon skins, seven dollars in money and his canoe and put off down the river. On returning home at night he learned from his wife what had happened and immediately determined to catch the thief. He borrowed a canoe of his nearest neigh-bor and started down the river for that purpose. Several miles below, a large rock lay in the middle of the river with a swift current flowing on each side of it. On this rock his canoe lodged in such a manner that he could not get it off. He got out of his boat and managed to get a solid footing but having carefully viewed the situation he gave up all hope of ever getting away alive and commenced to pray. After praying for sometime, he concluded the forced prayer could not avail much. So he quit praying and plunging into the icy water, swam ashore. He went to the nearest house and dried his clothing. At daylight he set out, this time on foot down the riverbank in search of his man. Four or five miles below he found his canoe tied to the bank bottom up and knew from that circumstance and from the swift current in the river that the thief had also been capsized and lost all the stolen goods. He went to the nearest house and found the man drying his clothes. He took the refugee in charge and start-ed back on foot. Thinking the matter over, be concluded to give his captive the choice of a whipping or a trip to the penitentiary. The man chose the whipping. He accordingly tied him to a tree, cut a good switch and began on him. He whipped awhile, then talked, telling the culprit that the whipping was for his good. He repeated the castigation till they were both worn out. Then he turned the malefactor loose and gave him some good advice. As the hat of the unfortunate evildoer had been lost in the river he gave him his own and went home bareheaded. Twenty years later he met this man in an adjoining state, with an interesting family around him, well to do and respected by all his neighbors. The whipping was not referred to by either party; but it is not at all improbable that the timely whipping with its accompanying advice made a man of the unlucky thief.

GANDER-PULLING "After raising five crops, James Montgomery O'Hair concluded that the mountains had no further attraction for him and in the fall of 1829 he rounded up his hogs which he had increased to one hundred seven head, and his calves, which had grown to be good sized steers, and sold the entire lot, together with twenty acres of standing corn in the field, for five hundred dollars. His father-in-law, James Montgomery had decided to emigrate to Indiana and he had selected Illinois for his future home. He hired a man to move him and he himself walked behind the wagon, driving three cows. He arrived in Illinois about the 10th of October 1829. He had sent his wife and two children with her father to Indiana. He entered one hundred fifty-six acres of land six miles south of Paris, sowed four acres of wheat and commenced to build a cabin. When Sunday came he found there was not a church or school house nearer than six miles. He began to look about and see what class of people he was to make his home and rear his children with and found them congregated on Sunday at shooting matches, horse races and gander-pullings. They would take an old gander, tie his feet to the limb of a tree, soap his head and neck, then go back fifty yards and ride as fast as their horses could run under the gander and catch him by the head; whoever pulled the head off received the gander as a prize. Men were pulled off of their horses oftener than heads were pulled off of the ganders. As the young farmer from Kentucky had been taught to respect the Sabbath and was a member of the Methodist church, he could not think of rearing his children in such a community. So he concluded to find a better neighborhood.

"About the last of October he came over to Indiana after his wife and children. The first Sunday following his arrival he attended church in a log schoolhouse.... After consulting his wife and comparing these men and the land about with the people and land in Illinois, where he had a claim he concluded to sell out and locate in Indiana. Mr. _______ his brother-in-law, proposed to sell him eighty acres of his land for two hundred dollars and then give him an additional eighty-acre tract adjoining it, he accepted the proposition. These one hundred and sixty acres form a part of his present home farm six miles from Greencastle. Immediately after the purchase he left for Illinois and moved all his household goods on a packsaddle, arriving at his new Indiana farm the latter part of October 1829.

CLEARING LAND "The first thing was to build him a log house in about the thickest woods he had ever seen. By spring he was ready to move into the cabin. He at once went to work deadening timber, rolling logs and burning brush by night. The first spring he succeeded in clearing three acres, among the stumps of which, planting in June, he raised a good crop of corn. The second year he cleared ten acres. After cutting all the timber down and trimming it ready for rolling he called in his neighbors and thirty of them came to help him. The next day he and his thirty assistants went to another neighbor and helped him, and so on from clearing to clearing. And so from year to year the sturdy early settlers toiled until they finally succeeded in clearing and fencing their farms. James Montgomery O'Hair says that off of the farm on which he settled when he came to Putnam County be has sold twelve thousand dollars worth of walnut and poplar timber and he is satisfied that he destroyed and made into rails an amount that if it were standing today (1910) would be valued at not less than twenty-thousand dollars.

"The early settlers were all poor and dependent upon selling what little they had to spare to newcomers into the county. At one time at a Fourth of July celebration they were very much discouraged by the Judge declaring that the country would soon be filled up with inhabitants and they would have no one to whom they could sell their surplus; but as the country became settled their markets opened and the Judge's problem was solved.

"The first church in the neighborhood was built of logs. The prominent contributors to the erection of this building were the subject of this sketch, his father-in-law and others in the neighborhood. Not having any money to donate, the first mentioned on the above list subscribed a cow which was sold for eight dollars, the money thus obtained being used in the construction of the church. The inhabitants attended church by families in wagons drawn by oxen some of the men walking and leading the oxen.

"In due course of time James Montgomery O'Hair began to accumulate some money and ere long had bought forty acres of land adjoining his home farm for one hundred dollars. His next purchase was eighty acres for five hundred dollars. And as he could spare the money he kept adding to his farm until he had increased it to five hundred and fifty acres; this was in the year 1847. He had always made it a rule never to buy land until he could make a partial payment and see his way to pay the balance, giving his note for deferred payments; and he never failed to meet the notes when due. He was never asked to give an endorser or make a mortgage.

"..... Mr. O'Hair has assisted his eight Sons in buying more than three thousand acres of land, though all the money for this purpose or for any other purpose advanced to them has, with the exception of eight hundred dollars each, been returned to him. He preferred to let them pay for their own homes that they might better appreciate them. He attributes his financial success largely to keeping out of debt and avoiding speculation and has tried to impress the same rule of life upon his sons."

(bio by: Brenda) 

DEATHS. O'HAIR. On Tuesday, July 25, 1899, at Greencastle, Ind., James E. M. O'Hair departed this life. He was born in this county on August 16, 1804, and removed to Indiana in about 1828, settling near Greencastle. He was the only uncle of J. G. Trimble, of this city. He raised a large family and was a prosperous farmer. He was a most excellent man, a zealous member of the Methodist Church.


Spouses:
 Permelia Lockridge O'Hair (1818 - 1856)
 Margaret Montgomery O'Hair (1807 - 1849)*

Children:

 William Asbury O'Hair (1826 - 1913)*
 James Elsberry O'Hair (1827 - 1920)*
 Greenberry Montgomery O'Hair (1830 - 1920)*
 John Tribbett O'Hair (1832 - 1879)*
 Eliza Jane O'Hair Curtis (1834 - 1869)*
 Bascom O'Hair (1837 - 1916)*
 Sarah Elizabeth O'Hair Hillis (1839 - 1919)*
 Robert Simpson O'Hair (1841 - 1931)*
 Celina Gibson O'Hair Curtis (1843 - 1927)*
 Sylvester Greenville O'Hair (1844 - 1920)*
 Leroy Taylor O'Hair (1848 - 1849)*
 Robert L. O'Hair (1853 - 1925)*
 Margaret Permelia O'Hair Black (1855 - 1943)*

Burial: Brick Chapel Cemetery Brick Chapel Putnam County Indiana, USA

view all 18

James Edington Montgomery O'Hair's Timeline

1804
July 5, 1804
Mount Sterling, Montgomery County, Kentucky, United States
1826
January 8, 1826
Estill County, Kentucky, United States
1827
November 13, 1827
Morgan County, Kentucky, United States
1830
January 20, 1830
Greencastle, Putnam County, Indiana, United States
1832
April 22, 1832
Putnam County, Indiana, United States
1834
December 21, 1834
Putnam County, Indiana, United States
1837
June 18, 1837
Brick Chapel, Putnam County, Indiana, United States
1839
September 2, 1839
Putnam County, Indiana, United States
1841
June 30, 1841
Putnam County, Indiana, United States
1843
October 9, 1843
Brick Chapel, Putnam County, Indiana, United States