Contributer: |
Trancription contributed by Vivian Combs Moon 21 Oct 2003 |
Source: |
The History of Miami County, Ohio, Containing a History of the County;
its Cities, Towns, etc.; General and Local Statistics; Portraits of Early
Settlers and Prominent Men; History of the Northwest Territory; History
of Ohio ... etc. Chicago: W.H. Beers, 1880. pages 844-845 |
Comments: |
Luke Smith MOTE was the brother to Marcus MOTE |
LUKE SMITH MOTE, farmer; P. O. West Milton; was born Aug. 21, 1812, in Randolph
Township, Montgomery Co., Ohio; his parents re David Mote and Miriam (Mendenhall)
Mote; they settled first in Montgomery Co. in 1811, but in 1822 moved to Miami
Co.
Persons bearing the surname Mote (more correctly Motte) and those in marriage
connection with the family, were numerically large, and bore a conspicuous part
amount the first settlers in Union Township, Miami Co., Ohio, not only in clearing
out farms in the forest, but also in making up its first church and civil organizations;
the first emigrants of this name came over from England, near London, to Pennsylvania,
soon after its first settlement; they were three brothers, John, Jonathan and
William; John went into the Southern States, and settled in Northern Georgia;
William died of smallpox while serving in the Colonial army (unmarried 0; Jonathan
remained in Pennsylvania, living in Chester Co.; the early settlers in this
township bearing the family name, were his descendants; his son David, who married
Dorcas Nichols, also removed to the South, and settled in Columbia Co., Ga.;
they had ten children born to them, six sons and four daughters; their names
and relative ages are as follows; Margaret, David, Rachel, Jonathan, Mary, William,
John, Jeremiah, Dorcas and Jesse; all reached adult age (except Dorcas, who
died in childhood) and were married and raised up families (except David, who
died in his 27th year); David Mote, Sr., aforesaid, or Grandfather David, as
he was called, lived most of his days on the borders of civilization, where
much wild game abounded, and therefore became very expert in the use of the
rifle; he mentioned, among other items of his experience in hunting, that he
had killed two deer at a shot thirteen times, and twice he had killed three;
this expertness in the use of the rifle was apparently handed down to some of
his descendants, a few of whom delighted in the chase, and could number the
slain of the wild herds of the forests by the score, and even hundreds; in person
he was of medium height, of square and rather heavy build, thoughtful and given
to taciturnity; he and his wife accompanied their children when they came to
Ohio in 1802; his mental and physical faculties were little impaired as ripe
age advanced, his step being elastic and his eyesight clear up to the close
of life; he died at his son John's, of gastritis, on the 4th of March, 1817,
aged 84 years, being the oldest of the first emigrants in this township; his
wife, Dorcas, died the following November, in her 86th year.
As above stated, said David Mote, Sr., and his sons and daughters and their
families, were of the first emigrants in these parts: Jeremiah and William,
accompanied by their father and mother, came in September, 1802, and the rest
soon followed them. This part of the county being noted for its many large cold
springs, which discharge their waters, tumbling over the rocks, into the timeworn
gorges some fifty or sixty feet on their way to the river, affording many mill
privileges, were early sought out and selected for homes and sites for mills;
Jonathan Mote took those on the farm now owned by Mrs. Thomas Vore; he built
the first brick house there on this river, north of Dayton, in 1810, which is
still standing; he died there away in April, 1839, of gastric derangement, like
his father, in his 81st year; none bearing the family name of his descendants
remain in these parts. William Mote's farm adjoined his brother Jonathan's on
the southwest; John's and Jeremiah's farms were three miles directly south,
on the Montgomery Co. line. John was a physician, and widely known as Dr. Mote;
the early settlers were much afflicted with ague, chills and malarial fevers,
from impurities of the atmosphere caused by stagnant water and decaying timber;
he being the only doctor in these parts, his time was much taken up in administering
to the sick and afflicted; hence his large practical experience in that day;
there was a greater mortality in his family, after his children had married
and settled in life, from pulmonary disease. Jeremiah was also accounted a good
nurse among the sick, and more of a ready writer than ordinary in that early
day; he was Clerk or Secretary of the Friends' Monthly Meeting at West Branch
in its first organization, and the old church records are in his handwriting;
his wife was Mary Butler, a native of Durhamshire, England; they had the following
children born to the, viz., William, David, Aaron, Ann and Dorcas (twins, died
in infancy), Jeremiah, Isaiah, Mary, Susanna, Sarah, Miriam, Hannah and Enoch,
all of whom grew to mature age, were married and had families; he removed to
Vigo Co., Ind., where he died in 1820, aged 50 years; their sons and daughters
nearly all remained and lived in that State. Daniel Motte, Jr., son of Jeremiah,
married Miriam Mendenhall, daughter of Caleb and Susanna Mendenhall, and settled
in Randolph Township, Montgomery Co., adjoing Miami Co.; they had five children
(sons) born to them, viz., Luke Smith, Zeno, Marcus, Linus and Enos, who all
grew to adult age, married and settled in life; in 1820 he removed to Vigo Co.,
Ind., but, on account of malarial fevers, that attacked all the early settlers
in those Western prairies, he returned to Ohio in the fall of 1822, and settled
in this township; he was a prominent member of the old Friends Church at West
Branch, as its records show; he lived on a farm, but had a carpenter shop, being
handy with tools; he made house furniture, worked part of his time at the carpenter's
trade and in the machine-shop setting up machinery for woolen-mills; he taught,
also, his eldest boys the use of tools; hence they always had employment enough
in rough weather in his shop; he often spoke of the disadvantages he labored
under by lack of more literary knowledge; very few of the early settlers had
any opportunity for school learning, save in the common rudiments; he profited
by what little he did get, and was accounted competent to teach some of the
early schools, and was careful that his children should have better educational
advantages than he had; he died at his own homestead, adjoining the church lot
at West Branch, Sept. 23, 1862, in the 70th year of his age; three of his sons
live in that vicinity. Luke Smith, the eldest married Charity Jones, daughter
of Elisha Jones from South Carolina, in October, 1834; their children are Elisha
J., Arenah E., William Alden, Celestia S., Mary M., Arrie L., M. Bensen and
Cordelia B., three sons and five daughters;
the eldest, Elisha J., is a photographer in all its branches in Richmond, Ind.;
William A. is a portrait painter in the same place, both claiming to do no work
of the ordinary class; the daughters are handy in floral and ornamental work.
L. S. Motte is the originator of some very choice seedling apples and some other
kinds of fruits; the love of the fine arts and the culture of the finer fruits
and flowers, with him, appears to be innate in his children; having studied
and practiced medicine when younger in his life. Doctor is often prefixed to
his name, but of later years he declines following his occupation, except in
certain cases in women and children. Marcus Mote, third son of David, Jr., is
a portrait painter of note, also paints in superior style fruits and flowers;
the choice of this occupation was innate in him, having followed it from boyhood.
The family was rather noted for longevity, also for that trait of drawing conclusions
and arriving at a judgement free of all bias of mind, by external pressure.
There are but few of this large family connection bearing the family name, living
in the township at this writing; the greater part emigrated westward in Indiana
and further westward. Some families are in Delaware, Montgomery and Parke Cos.,
Ind., and a few in Illinois. Mary lies interred in the old graveyard at West
Branch. Great-grandfather David and wife and their sons Jonathan, William, Jesse
and John, and daughters Mary and Rachel, besides many children, grandchildren,
etc., rest in profound repose beneath its grassy mold.
The Mote family in the early settlement, and its family connection, owned a
large body of land south of Milton to the county line, and for half a mile over
the line and considerable west and north of the village also. But at this time
the major part has passed out of their hands.
21 Oct 2003 | Vivian Combs Moon | Father: David MOTE b: 6 DEC 1792 in Columbiana
Co, Georgia Mother: Miriam MENDENHALL b: 10 JUN 1792 Marriage 1 Charity JONES Married: OCT 1834 Children Elisha J. MOTE Arenah E. MOTE William Alden MOTE Celestia S. MOTE Mary M. MOTE Arrie L. MOTE M. Benson MOTE Cordelia B. MOTE |
This page created 21 October 2003 and last updated
1 May, 2007
© 2003 Arne H Trelvik
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