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DaMetz and Dametz Families


Thomas LEIGHTON was born about 1831 in of New Hampshire. He married Elizabeth NUTTER about 1656 in , , New Hampshire.

Elizabeth NUTTER [Parents] was born in 1636 in of Dover, Strafford, New Hampshire. She died in 1675 in Dover, Strafford, New Hampshire. Elizabeth married Thomas LEIGHTON about 1656 in , , New Hampshire.


Omer Ashford DAMETZ [Parents] was born on 1 Nov 1866 in Oskaloosa, Mahaska, Iowa. He died in Eureka, Greenwood, Kansas. Omer married Margaret Louise COFFIN on 10 Apr 1898 in Blue Rapids, Marshall, Kansas.

Certificate of Death; Kansas State Board of Health, Division of Vital Statistics, Nov 13, 1951; #51 014346 shows: Place of death: St. John's Hospital, Iola, Allen, Kansas. Usual place of residence: 609 N. Oak, Eureka, Greenwook, Kansas. Name: Omer Ashford DaMetz, d. 10/31/51,male,white, married, b. 11/1/1866, age 84 years, 1 month, 30 days. b. place: Oskaloosa, Iowa. Mother: Lavina Horn, Father: Francis Maxmillen, Occupation: retired farmer/ Informant: Mrs. Margaret Dametz. Disease or condition directly leading to death: Coronary occulcum (1/2 hour); Antecedient cuases due to R...Heart block (3 years), Arterio Sclorea (10-=16 years..not clear) Burial: 11/2/51; Greenwood cemetery, Eureka, Kansas.

Margaret Louise COFFIN [Parents] was born on 17 Dec 1875 in Coburg, Montgomery, Iowa. She died on 14 Jun 1956 in Eureka, Greenwood, Kansas. Margaret married Omer Ashford DAMETZ on 10 Apr 1898 in Blue Rapids, Marshall, Kansas.

They had the following children:

  M i Holiss Omer DA METZ
  M ii Ralph Ashford DA METZ
  F iii Gladis Marguerit DA METZ
  M iv Francis Arlo DA METZ
  M v Paul Stephens DA METZ
  M vi Robert Eugene DA METZ

Joseph Fairbanks STEPHENS [Parents] was born on 15 Sep 1836 in North Manchester, Wabash, Indiana. He died in 1928 in Sidney, Fremont, Iowa. Joseph married Mary Catherine KELLER on 7 Sep 1856 in North Manchester, Wabash, Indiana.

CENSUS: 1870 census shows Joseph F. Stephens as James Stephens. He is living next door to his brother's family. This census shows the right age and place of birth to be Joseph. It also shows Mary C. as his wife and his first two living children as Mary A. and Martha which are correct for Joseph F. Stephens.

CENSUS: 1870: James Stephens (really Joseph F. Stephens), 33, IN, Mary C., 31, PA, Mary A., 13, IA, Martha 11, IA, John L., 9k, IA, Lilly, 7, IA, Rosa, 5, IA, George W., 3, IA, Joseph 6/12, IA. also living with this family is John M.
Thorn age 29 from New York and listed as Farmer.

BURIAL: Record of Sidney Cemetery, Fremont, Sidney, Iowa

BIOGRAPHY: Joseph was a Civil War Vet.

BIOGRAPHY: From: Sandy Rosequist I am researching the same family as you are...
Joseph Fairbanks Stephens was born 9-15-1836 in North Manchester, IN. I found where his father John Noble Stephens purchased land in Indiana from the Ft. Wayne Land office on 9-2-1835. They all moved to Iowa in 1856 after the marriage of Joseph and Mary Catherine Keller were married on September 7, 1856 in North Manchester, IN. According to personal records of Mary Catherine (my gr-gr-grandmother), John Nobel Stephens, Joseph Fairbanks Stephens, Mary Catherine (Keller) Stephens, Lorenzo D.
Story along with L.D. Story's wife and daughter went by covered wagon west. They arrived in Sidney, Iowa on October 29, 1856.
Joseph F. and Mary C.had eleven children:
Mary Angeline Stephens (Palm) b. 6/17/1857 d. 4/18/1921 Margaret Genevre Stephens (Siddy) b. 11/6/1858 d. 12/26/1907 John Lincoln Stephens b. 3/6/1861 d. 8/15/1950
Lillian Ann Stephens (Piper) b. 12/26/1862 d. 9/24/1933 Emma Rosella Stephens (Larimore) b. 1/6/1865 d. 1/18/1945 George Washington Stephens b. 4/6/1867 d. 5/10/1914 Joseph Wesley Stephens b. 9/26/1869 d. 1/26/1913 Walter Charles Stephens b. 12/12/1871 d. 4/10/1965 Wiliam Sumner Stephens b. 4/1/1874 d. 5/1/1924
Infant Daughter b. 10/2/1876 d. 10/3/1876
Homer Sherman Stephens b. 11/8/1883
Walter Charles Stephens was my Gr-Grandfather. I have an account written by Mary Catherine of their early days in Iowa. I would be happy to share information with you.
Look forward to hearing from you,
Sandy Rosequist
Sandra_Rosequist@atk.com

BIOGRAPHY:
History of the Stephens Family
Mary Catherine Keller Stephens was born at Big Spring, Cumberland County, PA on October 19, 1838 and died at St. Paul, MN on April 13, 1933.
She was married to Joseph Fairbanks Stephens on September 7, 1856 at North Manchester, IN. Later in the same year they moved to Sidney, IA some time after purchasing a 160 acre farm about four miles southeast of Sidney where they reared their family. They lived on this farm until 1897 when they established their residence in Sidney. In 1918 they moved to St. Paul, MN where Mr. Stephens died on December 5, 1928.
Mr. and Mrs. Stephens lived together for more than seventy-two years. There were eleven children, five of whom were living at the time of Mrs. Stephens' death in 1933: John, Walter, Homer Lillie (Piper), and Rose (Larimore). The other children were Joe, George, Will, Siddy, Mary (Palm) and a daughter who died in infancy. In 1933 there were twenty living grandchildren and nineteen great grandchildren.
The following information was found among Mrs. Stephens' papers, mostly in her own handwriting: the rest was given orally:
"My father, John Keller, was of German descent and my mother Barbara Wagner, born in 1819, was of Dutch descent. The Kellers had married into the family of Kanagas, of German decent, both families of whom had large holdings in the Cumberland Valley of Pennsylvania, rich in land and water power. A spring of clear, pure sparkling water, wasting thousands of gallons every day, was only a stone's throw from the house in which I was born. Sensing that this water could be harnessed for utility purposes, my father and grandfather made a dam about 200 feet from the spring's source, erected a flour mill, a saw mill, and one of plaster for grinding limestone, the lime being used for fertilizer. The saw mill was used chiefly for making barrels for the flour which was sent to Baltimore for further distribution. Grandfather did not stop with this; he built a church high up over the spring with steps leading up to it. Under the spring he built a milk house, constructed so that the cold water could flow under the crocks of milk. At the side was built a room where the running water could be dipped up for house use. He then built tenement houses for renters.
When General Lee was marching his troops on toward Gettysburg in 1863, he camped part of them on the enclosed clover fields of the farm on which my father was still living. The troops used to bring canteens to get water from this spring, known throughout the state for its pure water. They confiscated the flour from the mill and made my mother bake it into bread and biscuits. Then they helped themselves to the butter, milk and cream and were entirely unconcerned as to whether there was anything left for the family's Sunday dinner. When the soldiers moved on, all the horses on the place went with them, and without purchase.
Now to give a few highlights in our early married life. Before marriage both Mr. Stephens and I taught school, he received $15 a month and I received $1.50 for each student for the term. As was the custom, we boarded around from one place to another. It was mostly teaching the three R's in those days, but you know, many of our smartest men and women came from the little log school houses.
I lived near the home of baby Thomas Marshall, later to become Vice-President of the United States under Woodrow Wilson. Little did I think, while caring for him as a baby , that he was destined to become one of the Nation's best-known men. In after years I received a letter from Mr.
Marshall, together with his picture, on the margin of the picture being written, "This is to Mrs. Stephens, the only living person who knew me as a baby."
After marriage, on September 7, 1856 in North Manchester, Indiana, we started by covered wagon with six horses for a trek to the west - - we knew not where. Our company consisted of six, Mr. Stephens' father, John Nobel Stephens, Mr. L.D. Story (his half brother), wife and daughter, Mr. Stephens and myself. It was a perilous journey with winter setting in, with rough, muddy roads - - sometimes no roads at all - - and with often dangerous swollen streams to ford, there being practically no bridges. There were some ferries, including the Mississippi.
We arrived in Sidney on the eve of October 29. As the weather was getting severe, we decided to stop for the winter provided we could get shelter for man and beast. Mr. Wm. Spratlin, who had recently purchased a farm some three miles south, offered us what accommodations he had, so we decided to stay for the winter. The house, with no floor boards save mother earth, was very cold, being weatherboarded outside, and inside lined with boards, with joists overhead. There were many peek-a-boos in the roof. My new rag carpet was laid over the joists instead of under our feet. Cook stoves for cooking and heating, with green wood for fuel, was the best we could do. We were without milk, butter and cream during the entire winter. The following year we traded our two watches for a cow and a hog and thereafter were never without milk, cream, butter and meat.
The winter was decidedly cold. On December first it rained, on the second it froze and sleeted, from the third on to the thirteenth it snowed, winding up with an awful blizzard that meant the loss of many lives. In the spring we moved to the 90 acre farm known as the Old Chestnut Place where Center School is located and where our first four children were born. When returning from church one Sunday, we found our home burned to the ground - - nothing but ashes remained, so all we had left were the clothes on our backs. Relatives and friends began trekking westward from Indiana and other points, buying farms and engaging in building operations. Some of the hardships endured during the next few years of pioneer life could scarcely be described.
In the spring on 1864 we purchased from Mr. Thomas Thompson of Riverton, and later of Shenandoah, the 160 acre farm between Sidney and Riverton, where the last seven children were born and where all were reared, save one, to manhood and womanhood. First, it was a one room log house where we lived for ten years, several of the children coming during this time. Complements to the house were a stable, a well and a cave. Naturally enough there came during this period the log school house, used not only for regular school purposes, but for religious services, singing schools, literary societies, spelling bees, etc. People came for miles to our entertainments, both from the rural communities and from the nearby towns. In 1874 came the frame school house, the pride of the community. It likewise was used for many purposes. I remember that on one cold bitter Sunday in the winter, forty people were taken to the Nishna River by the Baptist minister for baptism - - the ice being first cut out. These meetings were very beneficial to our community, to old as well as young, so we were glad to be able to raise our children under a wholesome, Christian environment.
In 1874 we built an eight room frame house and had the pleasure of what was then a strictly modern home, for a period of eight months, only to have it entirely swept away by the tornado of June 17, 1875. Parts of this home were found more than ten miles away. All that was left could be carted away in a wheelbarrow. This catastrophe was only one of the year's incidents. The hail and the grasshoppers did the rest, and did a clean job of it. Still we were happy and praised God because our lives were spared.
It may be interesting to know that in May, 1864, during the Civil War, I took my four children (Mary John, Siddy, and Lillie) for a trip back to the old family home in Pennsylvania. To make this journey it was necessary for me to go by wagon to Savannah, Missouri, the nearest railroad station. While there I visited relatives and friend at Harrisburg and Pittsburgh, and incidentally saw the city of Chambersburg burn to the ground, having been fired by the Confederates.
I have had the privilege of living through twenty-three presidential administrations - - from that of Martin Van Buren to what is now the termination of Herbert Hoover's Administration. During these years I have, through magazines and newspapers, kept in as close touch as possible with both national and world affairs, thanks to my good eyesight and through interesting, informed friends. Through correspondence I have also kept in touch with hundreds of relatives and friends from coast to coast, as in this span of years it just seems that every state in the Union is dotted with many whom I know.
I must confess that I am getting just a little old, as was evidenced by the fact that on December 22, 1932 when rising from my chair, after having finished writing a long reminiscing letter to a relative in Pennsylvania, I accidentally fell to the floor, breaking my leg just below the hip. I am now in the Midway Hospital, to a hospital the first time in my life as a patient, where I am having the finest care.
Thanks to my daughter, Mrs. Rose Larimore, my correspondence is still being carried on. She has been my aid and inspiration in contact ways for a number of years, and during the last three weeks has written hundreds of letters for me.
At this time I send my love and greeting to all with whom I have had the great privilege of associating, including a close friendship with many whom I have known for a number of decades. I am the eldest of a family of thirteen sisters and brothers, and the lone survivor. I am also the only living one of all the relatives and friends who came from the East to locate in southwest Iowa.
If this shock should prove too great for me, I want you all to know that I am ready to be taken into the arms of the Great Father, to whom thousands of relatives and friends have gone before.
I have tried to keep the Faith through all these years and to do what little I could for the betterment of those about me.
May God continue to bless, cheer and comfort everyone.
Mrs. Mary Catherine Keller Stephens
January, 1933

Mary Catherine KELLER was born in 1838 in , , Pennsylvania. She died in 1935 in Sidney, Fremont, Iowa. Mary married Joseph Fairbanks STEPHENS on 7 Sep 1856 in North Manchester, Wabash, Indiana.

BURIAL: Record of Sidney Cemetery, Fremont, Sidney, Iowa

They had the following children:

  F i Mary Angeline STEPHENS
  F ii Martha Genevre STEPHENS
  M iii John Lincoln STEPHENS was born on 6 Mar 1861 in Fremont, Sidney, Iowa. He died on 15 Aug 1950.
  F iv Lillian Ann STEPHENS was born on 26 Dec 1862 in Fremont, Sidney, Iowa. She died on 24 Sep 1933.
  F v Emma Rosella STEPHENS was born on 6 Jan 1865 in Fremont, Sidney, Iowa. She died on 18 Jan 1945.
  M vi George Washington STEPHENS was born on 6 Apr 1867 in Fremont, Sidney, Iowa. He died on 10 May 1914 in Sidney, Fremont, Iowa.

BURIAL: Record of Sidney Cemetery, Fremont, Sidney, Iowa
  M vii Joseph Wesley STEPHENS was born on 26 Sep 1869 in Fremont, Sidney, Iowa. He died on 26 Jan 1913 in Sidney, Fremont, Iowa.

BURIAL: Record of Sidney Cemetery, Fremont, Sidney, Iowa
  M viii Walter Charles STEPHENS was born on 12 Dec 1871 in Fremont, Sidney, Iowa. He died on 10 Oct 1965.
  F ix Girl STEPHENS was born on 2 Oct 1876 in Fremont, Sidney, Iowa. She died on 3 Oct 1876 in Fremont, Sidney, Iowa.

SOURCE: Fremont County, Iowa Cemetery Records

BURIAL: Record of Sidney Cemetery
  M x Homer Sherman STEPHENS was born on 8 Nov 1883 in Fremont, Sidney, Iowa.

Jacob H. STEPHENS [Parents] was born on 30 Sep 1838 in Manchester, Wabash, Indiana. He died on 9 Aug 1900 in Sidney, Fremont, Iowa. Jacob married Frances M. RICHARDS on 2 Mar 1861 in Sidney, Fremont, Iowa.

DEATH: Fremont County, Iowa, Cemetery Records

MARRIAGE: Marriage records of Fremont County, Iowa

Source: History of Fremont County, Iowa

CENSUS: 1970 Census shows Jacob H. Stephens as John N. Stephens. John N. was Jacob's father. I wonder if Jacob changed his name after his father died or if it was just a recording error. The age and birth listed is correct for Jacob. Frances is listed as the wife in the census. Jacob's wife is Frances Richards. This census shows a son, Milton, age 4. Frances Richards' father is Milton Richards. I am sure this is the right family.

CENSUS: 1970: John N. Stephens 31, Ind., Frances 32, Ill, Luella 3, IA, Alice A. 6, IA, Milton, 4, IA, Dicey F. (male), 2, IA.

MARRIAGE: Marriage records of Fremont County, Iowa

Frances M. RICHARDS [Parents] was born on 3 Nov 1837 in , Shelby, Ohio. She died on 9 May 1921 in Sidney, Fremont, Iowa. Frances married Jacob H. STEPHENS on 2 Mar 1861 in Sidney, Fremont, Iowa.

They had the following children:

  F i Luella STEPHENS was born in 1862 in Fremont, Sidney, Iowa.
  F ii Alice A. STEPHENS was born in 1864 in Fremont, Sidney, Iowa.
  M iii Milton STEPHENS was born in 1866 in Fremont, Sidney, Iowa.
  M iv Dicey F. STEPHENS was born in 1868 in Fremont, Sidney, Iowa.

They had the following children:

  F i Frances M. RICHARDS
  F ii Mary RICHARDS
  M iii Edward J. RICHARDS

Edward J. RICHARDS [Parents] was born in 1845 in , , Illinois. He died in 1913 in Sidney, Fremont, Iowa. Edward married Lucy A. STEPHENS on 1 Oct 1865 in , Fremont, Iowa.

DEATH: Fremont County, Iowa, Cemetery Records

Marriage: Marriage records of fremont County, Iowa

Lucy A. STEPHENS [Parents] was born in 1848 in Manchester, Wabash, Indiana. She died in 1922 in Sidney, Fremont, Iowa. Lucy married Edward J. RICHARDS on 1 Oct 1865 in , Fremont, Iowa.

From: Dorman
2. LUCY A.2 STEPHENS (JOHN N.1) was born 1848 in Chester,Wabash, Indiana, and died 1922 in Sidney, Fremont County, Iowa. She married EDWARD J. RICHARDS October 01, 1865 in Iowa, son of MILTON RICHARDS and JANE JACKSON. He was born May 22, 1845 in Shelby County, Ohio, and died 1913 in Sidney, Fremont County, Iowa. Notes for LUCY A. STEPHENS: Frances M. Richards, a daughter of Milton, married Jacob. H. Stephens. and Mary Richards, daughter of Milton, married Lorenzo d. Story. Yes, Lucy A. Stephens is the sister of of Jacob and step sister of Lorenzo. Step sister: She was stepsister of Lorenzo Story, daughter of John N. Stephens
Child of LUCY STEPHENS and EDWARD RICHARDS is:

3. i. EDWIN GRANT3 RICHARDS, b. 1867, Sidney, Fremont County, Iowa; d. 1932, Sidney, Fremont County, Iowa.

Generation 3
3. EDWIN GRANT3 RICHARDS (LUCY A.2 STEPHENS, JOHN N.1) was born 1867 in Sidney, Fremont County, Iowa, and died 1932 in Sidney, Fremont County, Iowa. He married MAUDE GWYNETH VAUGHAN, daughter of ARA VAUGHAN and ROSINA BAKER. She was born November 01, 1875 in Iowa, and died Abt. 1947 in Council Bluffs, Iowa. Notes for EDWIN GRANT RICHARDS: Edwin was a schoolteacher and a farmer. From what I was told by Eula, the oldest daughter of Lovey and David, (my sister). They lived in Sidney, then
Tabor, Iowa. Notes for MAUDE GWYNETH VAUGHAN: Gwynneth Maude Vaughan Richards. Everyone called her Maude G. I am still researching her family. Have not found much about her brothers and sisters other than names. She was born in 1875 then she was about 28 ?- when Louella and Alma Maude were born, and when LOVEY IRENE was born, she would have been 37 years old, when Lowell, (moms' baby brother) was born she would have been 46 and Edwin would have been 54. Mom did tell me her parents were "kind of old"when she was a teen. Also, there is a double stone in the Sidney, Iowa Cemetary. But no date of death for her. At the time of her death she was living with her daughter Lovey and David, and their 12 children on 16th Avenue in Council Bluffs,
Iowa. She had been 'not well' for the 2-3 years prior to her death. According to Eula, she spent most of her time in her bed the last year. I imagine that my parents had their hands full after the funeral, and they certainly had no money. I am still trying to find info on Gwyennth Maudes family, her brothers and sisters:
Kosseth(Kossith?), born about 1854, Rosina Elsie Vaughan, born about 1859.
Florence G. Vaughan, born about 1865, (He married?) and Kantippi R. Vaughan born abt. Jan. 15th ,1869
I was told that Gwynneth Maude, (Loveys mother), went to California to visit her brother Koss, about 2 years after Edwins' death, (abt. 1935 or 1936) SHE TOOK A BUS TO CALIFORNIA! and stayed 4 months.

Children of EDWIN RICHARDS and MAUDE VAUGHAN are:
i. LOVEY IRENE4 RICHARDS, b. February 02, 1912, Sidney, Fremont County, Iowa; d. December 30, 1988, Council Bluffs, Iowa; m. DAVID ANDREW SHOEMAKE, Abt. 1927; b. May 17, 1907, Atchison Co. Missouri; d. August 15, 1981, Council Bluffs, Iowa.

ii. LOWELL RICHARDS, b. 1921, Sidney, Fremont County, Iowa; d. 1922, Sidney, Fremont County, Iowa.

iii. LOUELLA RICHARDS, b. Abt. 1899; d. Abt. 1909.

iv. ALMA MAUDE RICHARDS, b. Abt. 1902; d. Abt. 1909, Sidney, Fremont County, Iowa. Notes for ALMA MAUDE RICHARDS: She died of scarlet fever on the same day as her twin sister Louella..

They had the following children:

  M i Edwin Grant RICHARDS

Lorenzo David F. STORY [Parents] was born on 18 Apr 1832 in , Genesee, New York. He died on 26 Feb 1885 in Sidney, Fremont, Iowa. Lorenzo married Mary RICHARDS on 24 Feb 1859 in , Fremont, Iowa.

MARRIAGE: Marriage records of Fremont County, Iowa

Mary RICHARDS [Parents] was born on 5 Sep 1842 in Mound City, Pulaski, Illinois. She died on 26 May 1920 in Sidney, Fremont, Iowa. Mary married Lorenzo David F. STORY on 24 Feb 1859 in , Fremont, Iowa.

They had the following children:

  M i John M. STORY
  F ii Wealthy J. STORY
  F iii Francis Almira STORY
  M iv Lorenzo Augustus STORY

Rufus TRAVIS was born about 1857 in of Iowa. He married Wealthy J. STORY on 27 Aug 1879 in , Fremont, Iowa.

MARRIAGE: Marriage records of Fremont County, Iowa

MARRIAGE: Marriage records of Fremont County, Iowa

Wealthy J. STORY [Parents] was born about 1862 in Sidney, Fremont, Iowa. She married Rufus TRAVIS on 27 Aug 1879 in , Fremont, Iowa.


John M. STORY [Parents] was born on 3 Feb 1860 in Sidney, Fremont, Iowa. He died on 27 Oct 1927 in Sidney, Fremont, Iowa. John married Julia WITTY on 25 Oct 1882 in , Fremont, Iowa.

MARRIAGE: Marriage records of Fremont County, Iowa

Source: Fremont County, Iowa, Cemetery Records

MARRIAGE: Marriage records of Fremont County, Iowa

Julia WITTY was born on 6 Apr 1864 in of Fremont, Iowa. She died on 23 Aug 1938 in , Fremont, Iowa. Julia married John M. STORY on 25 Oct 1882 in , Fremont, Iowa.

They had the following children:

  M i Ralph STORY was born about 1883 in , Fremont, Iowa.
  M ii Everett STORY was born about 1884 in , Fremont, Iowa.
  F iii Elizabeth STORY was born about 1886 in , Fremont, Iowa.
  F iv Ritta STORY was born about 1888 in , Fremont, Iowa.
  M v Elmer STORY was born on 29 Aug 1885 in , Fremont, Iowa. He died on 6 Mar 1886 in , Fremont, Iowa.
  M vi Willie STORY was born on 18 Aug 1887 in , Fremont, Iowa. He died on 10 Sep 1905 in , Fremont, Iowa.
  M vii Lawrence STORY was born on 5 May 1892 in , Fremont, Iowa. He died in Mar 1967.
  F viii Grace STORY

Clark W. BEAUCHAMP was born in 1836 in , , Ohio. He died in 1863. Clark married Margaret R. STEPHENS about 1858 in , Fremont, Iowa.

Clark W. BEAUCHAMP died in the Civil War

1880 census of Lincoln, Smith, Kansas shows:
Benj. F. COFFIN 31/IA/ NC/ OH
Martha A. COFFIN 37/IN/VY/NY
Maggie B. COFFIN 20/IA/IA/IN
Living next door was Martha's sister and her son:
Maggie R. BEAUCHAMP 39/IN/VYT/NY
John A. BEAUCHAMP 18/IN/OH/IN

Margaret R. STEPHENS [Parents] was born in 1840 in Manchester, Wabash, Indiana. She died in of Lincoln, Smith, Kansas. Margaret married Clark W. BEAUCHAMP about 1858 in , Fremont, Iowa.

They had the following children:

  M i Francis A. BEAUCHAMP was born in 1859 in , Fremont, Iowa.
  M ii John A. BEAUCHAMP was born in 1862 in , Wabash, Indiana. He died in of Lincoln, Smith, Kansas.

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