John Calvin CLARK
Henry County, Illinois Cemetery Inscriptions, (FHL#977.338 V3h Vol 13)
RESEARCH NOTE: Broome County wasn't created until 1806, from Tioga County. RESEARCH NPTE: John Clark II, son of John Clark (Rev War) and Abigail Hutchinson, married Anna Gibbs. They had nine children. John was a pioneer minister and was always on the frontier. He was never longer than seven years in one place, yet he never made a move without consulting his wife. She would seek the counsel of the Lord and was guided by the answers to her prayers. Pioneer church work took John much from home, so the work of raising and caring for the family fell to the little mother and the older boys. She must have done an excellent work for ALL six of her sons became preachers, except Gibbs, and even he exhorted at times. They were largely self-educated, persuing their studies through the long winter evenings by the light of the open fire. John's last charge was the pastorate of the Baptist Church at Oxford, Illinois, where he passed on to his reward in June of 1852. Doris Dixon PO Box 98 Pomeroy, WA 99347 24 Mar 1980 NAME: John Calvin CLARK II
HISTORICAL INFORMATION: Anna could not sing, but all of her children were quite musical, several of them taught singing in school as well as lead their congregations. After John's death, Anna made her home with their son, John Jay, near Sugar Grove, Lawrence County, Illinois. With him, she crossed the plains in the summer of 1854. There had been talk of Texas, where some of the family had gone, but Anna voted for Oregon where her son, Alvin and her daughter, Rosetta, with their families, had gone two years previously. This pioneer mother of seventy-four years, walked many miles on the way from Illinois to Oregon--never complaining of any hardship. She was a loving companion to her granddaughter, Irene. (By Phoebe Irene Clark, Dau of John Jay Clark.)
OCCUPATION: Alvin Clark, Baptist Minister, Millwright Born 1805, Lisle, Broome, New York 1815-1816 Reading, Hamilton, Ohio 1821-1827 Bridgeport, Lawrence, Illinois 1832-1837 Jacksonville, Morgan, Illinois 1840-1845 Grandview, Louisa, Iowa 1850 Millersburg, Mercer, Illinois _AKA_ 1850-1851 (Sugar Grove, Mercer,Illinois)Left for Oregon April 12, 1952 1852 May 7, 1952 at Council Bluffs, IA enroute to Oregon Trail 1853-1880 Oregon to Brush Prairie, Clark, Washington NOTES: Alvin Clark and Laurinda Gibbs were cousins. Laurindas' father was an uncle of Alvin Clark. Alvin and Laurinda's children were Lucy, Calista, Theresa. Rufus, Emaline, Dewitt, Howard and Hannah. Laurinda died. Alvin married Mary Miller Moore, a widow. She was the sister of Isaac Newton Miller who married his daughter, Emaline Clark, by Laurinda Gibbs. To them were born twins, Henry Clarence and Helen Clara. Mary died enroute to Oregon in 1852 from Cholera. Later Alvin married Eferiah McCracken, a widow, who bore him a son, Alvin Pitt Clark (June 1856). A book was written about Captain Alvin Clark and his family, called "Across The Plains And Beyond". It was written by Ruth Conard. The story tells of these pioneers, (Alvin was born in New York) who migrated to the west coast and ultimately settled in Brush Prairie, Washington.
Married Elizabeth Long on 04 Aug in Fulton Co. Il in a Double Wedding Ceremony between the Clarks and the Long families.
Married Charity Hudson according to Family Records. They had two sons: Obiah and John Hudson. Cyrus left his wife and children in the 1840s and Charity and the children went west--taking the Oregon Trail.
NOTES: Naomi died at the age of seventeen, unmarried--according to Family Records
NOTES: Samuel married Isobel Seely Clark (Orange's widow) according to family records NOTES: John & Thomas both migrated to Texas. There were other children.
HISTORICAL INFORMATION: John Jay Clark was born in Ohio but went to Illinois when his parents moved there, the exact year I do not know, but it was in the early 1820's. He attended Shurtiff College, Alton, IL in 1837-1838. In 1848 he moved to Sugar Grove, IL., and it was there his first wife died. He then married Betsy Van Atta whose parents had come to Sugar Grove from PA.. John Jay was licensed to preach by the Babptist Church in Sugar Grove in 1851. He crossed the Plains in 1854 and settled in Linn Co., OR. In the covered wagon train were his wife's parents, Mr & Mrs Gearsham Van Atta, with their children and his own mother who was at that time 74. They had three wagons for the two families. They left Sugar Grove April 1, 1854 and after a journey minus any real danger from Indians, reached the John Day River in August. On August 12th they met near Hepner by John Jay's brother Alvin and his brother-in-law Ransome Long, who had come to Oregon in 1852 by Ox-team. It was here they saw Mt. Hood for the first time. They followed the Barlow Road on the south side of Mt. Hood and on August 28th camped at Clackamas; from there they went to Oregon City, then by easy stages to the farm which it was decided to buy, in Linn Co.. After five months and four days of travel they were in their own home again-- a cabin 15 x 15 ft. to house the family of two grown-ups and three children. In the spring of 1857, John Jay Clark was ordained and was Pastor of the small Baptist Church of the neighborhood until they went to Washington in 1863. In 1857 they built a four room house which seemed like a palace after three years in a small cabin. In February of 1860, Grandma Anna Clark died at the age of 80. In 1861 was the flood caused by continuous rains and melting snows. In May 1863, the Clarks and the Eslem Halls, in five wagons, started for Washington Territory, near Vancouver, where Alvin Clark had already taken up a home-stead. It took six days to make the short trip from their old home in Linn Co. to Portland where they boarded a Scow and went down the Willamette to the Columbia River to Vancouver. From Vancouver they went out to Alvin Clarks on the old Durgan Place on Burnt Bridge Creek. On May 23, 1863, they started for their new home which already had a small cabin and was located not far from Brush Prairie. The Van Atta's were already settled at Brush Prairie and the Brush Prairie Cemetary is located on ground originally a part of their farm. John Jay Clark organized the Brush Prairie Baptist Church of which he was Pastor for twenty-seven years. This is the oldest Baptist Church in the state of Washington that has had a continuous existence since its organization. Besides being a Minister he was the pioneer doctor so after moralizing all the neighborhood couples he delivered all the babies. In 1869 he served a term in the Washington Legislature. The only way to reach Olympia was by stagecoach and to get to one session he walked the whole way since he had not enough money to buy stage fare. He was much loved and was affectionately known as Uncle Johnny Clark. Besides being a minister, doctor, and farmer, he was also a teacher, and for years the post office was at his house. He died in Portland, Oregon at the home of his oldest daughter, Mrs Napoleon Davis (Phoebe Irene), on November 24, 1902 at the age of 87. He was buried in the Brush Prairie Cemetary. By - Willeda L. Arnold (Mrs W,H,) Willeda L. Arnold Rt. 4, Box 52E, Vancouver, Washington 1941
He married Anna Gibbs 4 Jan 1801 at Lisle, Tioga, New York . Anna Gibbs was born at Litchfield, Litchfield, Connecticut 8 May 1780 daughter of Truman Gibbs and Anne Barnes .
They were the parents of 9
children:
Orange Clark
born 1802.
Cynthia Clark
born 1803.
Alvin Clark
born 19 May 1805.
Trueman Gibbs Clark
born 1813.
Cyrus Clark
born Abt 1809.
Naomi Clark
born Abt 1811.
Samuel Clark
born Abt 1812.
John Jay Clark
born 18 Jun 1815.
Bertha Rosetta Clark
born 10 Apr 1818.
John Calvin Clark died 6 Jun 1852 at Oxford, Henry, Illinois .
Anna Gibbs died 4 Feb 1860 at Halsey, Linn, Oregon .