Illinois
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Sangamon County
Illinois

BIOGRAPHIES

Source:
History of the Early Settlers of Sangamon County, Illinois
 - Centennial Record -
By John Carroll Power
Assisted by his wife,
Mrs. S. A. Power
Under the Auspices of the Old Settlers Society.
Springfield, Ill.:
Edwin A. Wilson & Co.
1876

A B C D E F G H I J K L M
N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

ZANE.  Three brothers of that name emigrated from England and settled in Gloucester county, New Jersey.  It is not known whether or not they were related to Jonathan and Ebenezer Zane, who explored the country about Wheeling, West Virginia, in 1769, and founded Zanesville, Ohio.  Of the three brothers who settled In New Jersey, the first names are not preserved, but one of them had a son, Simeon.  His son, Andrew, married Mary Franklin, a distant relative of Benjamin Franklin.  They moved to Philadelphia, where they had one living child, returned to New Jersey, where they had one child, and moved from there to Sangamon county, Illinois, arriving Oct. 15, 1839, in what is now Cartwright township where they had nine children.  Of their eleven children -
     JAMES S., born July 10, 1836, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, married in Sangamon county June 14, 1860, to Maria Rachel Purviance.  See Purviance or Purvines family.  They have four children, SAMUEL S., JOHN N., FRANKLIN H. and MARY E.  James S. Zane was elected in the fall of 1872 sheriff of Jasper county, Missouri, and resides at Carthage, the county seat.
     RHODA S.,
born Sept. 13, 1838, in Cape May county, New Jersey, married in Sangamon county, Apr. 21, 1859, to John T. Epler.  She died Mara. 21, 1871, leaving four children, CHARLES L., GEORGE A., MARY J. and RHODA E., who live with their father. John T. Epler is married again and resides two and a half miles south of Pleasant Plains, Sangamon county, Illinois.
     MARY F., born Mar. 25, 1841, in Sangamon county, married Feb. 13, 1867, to Dr. Henry VanMeter.  See his name.
     ELLEN S.,
born Dec. 20, 1842, in Sangamon county, married July 31, 1861, to Benjamin F. Jones.  She died May 25, and he died Aug. 27, 1867.  They had two children.  MARY J. died, aged three years.  JOHN W., born Dec. 12, 1864, lives with his grandfather Zane.
    
ELIZABETH S., born May 7, 1844, married Dec. 28, 1871, to William S. BullardSee his name.
     ANDREW,
born Aug. 20, 1846, in Sangamon county, married Feb. 27, 1873, to Mary J. Hamilton, near Pleasant Plains, Illinois.  They reside in Carthage, Jasper county, Missouri.
     JOHN W., born Oct. 31, 1848.
     JEREMIAH F., born Nov. 26, 1850.
     HANNAH M., born Dec. 25, 1852.
     ROBERT H., born Dec. 25, 1852.
~ Page 796
     ALICE B., born Apr. 25, 1849, the five latter live with their parents.
     John Zane and wife reside four miles east of Mechanicsburg, Sangamon county, Illinois - 1874.
Source: History of the Early Settlers of Sangamon County, Illinois - Centennial Record - Springfield, Ill.: Edwin A. Wilson & Co. - 1876 - Page 796

ZANE CHARLES S., brother to John Zane, was born Mar. 2, 1831, in Cumberland county, New Jersey.  In the spring of 1850 he came to the vicinity of Pleasant Plains, Sangamon county, Illinois, where he worked at farm labor by the month.  He afterwards attended McKendree college, at Lebanon, Illinois, teaching school in different parts of the State at intervals until July 15, 1856, when he came to Springfield.  Having previously commenced the study of law, he continued and was admitted to practice in teh spring of 1857.  He was three times elected city attorney, in 1858, 1860 and in 1865.  In June, 1873, he was elected Judge of the judicial circuit, of which Sangamon county is part, and is now - December, 1876 - in office.  He was married in 1859 to Margaret D. Maxcy.  They have six children FERNETTA M., CHARLES W., JOHN M., OLIVER W., MARGARET, FRANKLIN A. and HERBERT S.
     Judge Charles S. Zane was elected in November, 1876, a member of the National Lincoln Monument Association.  He, with his family, resides in Springfield, Sangamon county, Illinois.
Source: History of the Early Settlers of Sangamon County, Illinois - Centennial Record - Springfield, Ill.: Edwin A. Wilson & Co. - 1876 - Page 796

ROBERT B. ZIMMERMAN was born Oct. 5, 1811, in Centre county, Pennsylvania, and went from there to Elmira, New York, where he learned the business of painter and chair maker.  In the summer of 1835 he started west, traveling by stage, he missed his connections at Terre Haute, Indiana, and there being but one stage a week, rather than remain idle he and one or two others started on foot.  Arriving at the Okaw river in Illinois they found a company of emigrants from Tennessee, numbering one hundred and twenty wagons, with a corresponding number of men, women and children, all waiting until the men could construct a bridge for the teams to cross.  They remained with the emigrants, riding and walking alternately, and reached Springfield Nov. 18, 1835.  R. B. Zimmerman was married Dec. 25, 1838, at Farmington, now Farmindale, Sangamon county, to Susan P. SeeleyMrs. Zimmerman died Oct. 30, 1840, leaving one child -
     SUSAN L., born Apr. 17, 1840, in Springfield, Illinois.  She was married Apr. 17, 1860, to Eugene L. Gross, who was born Dec. 25, 1836, in Starville, Herkimer county, New York.  Rev. Alba Gross, the father of Eugene L. is a preacher in connection with the Baptist Church, and came to Fulton county, Illinois, in 1844, but now resides in Chatham, Illinois, E. L. Gross studied law at Knoxville, was admitted to the bar and practiced a short time at Mount Sterling, and came to Springfield, in 1858.  He revised and published the ordinances of the city of Springfield in 1865.  In January, 1868, he compiled and published a digest of the criminal laws of Illinois.  In February, 1868, he, in connection with his brother, Colonel William L. Gross, began their compilation of the Statues of Illinois, which were published in the fall of the same year.  Their last volume was published an index to all the laws of the State.  In 1872 they compiled and published the second volume of Gross' Statutes.  E. L. Gross, finding his health impaired, closed up his business, and in the spring of 1873 started on horseback and traveled through the Indian nation, thence to the Pacific coast, and returned by railroad, but that relentless destroyer, consumption, could not be induced to release its grasp.  After returning home he lingered until June 4, 1874, when he breathed his last, leaving a widow and four children, LEIGHLA, FRED, SUSIE and BESSIE, all residing in Springfield, Illinois.
     Robert B. Zimmerman was married Oct. 2, 1845, in Springfield, to Mary C. Townsend, who was born Nov. 7, 1821, in Caledonia county, Vermont.  They had two children, both died young.  In November, 1849, Mr. and Mrs. Zimmerman adopted a daughter, LIZZIE, when she was but three months old.  She was married Feb. 26, 1875, in 'Springfield, to Martin V. Smith.  They reside in East St. Louis, Illinois.
     Robert B. Zimmerman and Alexander P. Willard were in partnership as painters and dealers in painters' stock twenty-four years, and until the death of Mr. WillardSee his name.  Mr. Zimmerman is yet in business in which he has been more than forty-one years actively engaged in Springfield.  He has seen it grow, and had much to do with its growth from a very small village to a city of twenty-five thousand inhabitants, and from a county seat to be the capital of the fourth State in the American Union.  He has been an active and efficient officer of the Second Presbyterian church for many years; and in proportion to his ability he has probably been the most liberal contributor to its funds.  R B. Zimmerman and wife reside in Springfield, Illinois.
Source: History of the Early Settlers of Sangamon County, Illinois - Centennial Record - Springfield, Ill.: Edwin A. Wilson & Co. - 1876 - Page 797

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NOTES:
 

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