IAGenWeb Project - Clayton co.


John W. Downie

John W. Downie. In connection with the various personal sketches appearing in this history it is most pleasing to note the large percentage of native sons of Clayton county who have here been born and reared under the sturdy discipline of the farm, who have continued to pay loyal allegiance to the fundamental art and industry of agriculture, and who stand forth as substantial farmers and stockgrowers of this opulent section of the Hawkeye State. Such an one is Mr. Downie, who is a representative of a well known and highly esteemed family of this county and whose prestige as a farmer bases its claims on his ownership and individual management of a fine landed estate of 212 acres in Boardman township, the improvements on the place and its general air of thrift making it one of the model farms of the county.

On the homestead farm which is now his place of abode John W. Downie was born on the 2d of February, 1878, and he is a son of John and Ruth (Williams) Downie, the former of whom was born in the Dominion of Canada, of staunch Scottish lineage, and the latter of whom was born at Lockport, New York. John Downie was a man of strong intellectual powers and of mature judgment, with energy and resourcefulness in connection with business and imbued with those sterling attributes of character that ever beget objective confidence and good will. In his youth he became skilled as a surveyor and upon coming to Clayton county, Iowa, about the year 1841, he not only found much demand for his interposition along this important line of civil engineering work, but also made judicious investments in land, with the result that he eventually accumulated the large and valuable estate now represented in the fine farm owned and operated by his son John W., of this review.

On his farm he lived in peace and plenty until the close of his life, his death having occurred in 1884. The only child of his first marriage was Henry R., who was a resident of Boardman township at the time of his death, when about 55 years of age. John Downie exemplified in his career the sturdy integrity and the business sagacity so typical of those of Scottish ancestry, and no citizen of Clayton county had more secure place in popular confidence and esteem. His political support was given to the Republican party and as a citizen he was well qualified for not a little of leadership in popular sentiment and enterprise.

Mrs. Ruth (Williams) Downie long survived her honored husband and was 70 years of age at the time of her death, which occurred on the 12th of March, 1903, on the old homestead farm which had long been her place of residence, and which was endeared to her by many hallowed memories and associations. Of the five children the eldest is Lillian, who is the wife of Samuel D. Bergerson, of Berien Springs, Michigan; Rose was 39 years of age at the time of her death in 1903; Warren W. is now a resident of Harrington, Washington; Ray H. resides at Davenport, that state; and John W., of this review, is the youngest of the children as well as the only representative of the immediate family in Clayton county.

To the public schools of this county John W. Downie is indebted for his early education, and he remained on the home farm until after the death of his mother and his sister Rose, both of whom passed away in the year 1903, as noted in the preceding paragraph. Thereafter he completed an effective course in a business college at La Crosse, Wisconsin, in which he was graduated as a member of the class of 1906, and soon afterward he assumed personal charge of the fine old homestead farm, to the supervision of which he has since devoted himself with marked efficiency and progressiveness, with the result that he stands forth as one of the essentially representative agriculturists and stock raisers of his native county, with secure place as a loyal and liberal citizen who merits the unqualified esteem in which he is uniformly held.

Mr. Downie pays unfaltering allegiance to the Republican party and is zealous in support of its cause, though he has never manifested aught of ambition for public office. Both he and his wife attend the Congregational church and are popular factors in the representative social life of the community; the while their attractive home is known for its generous hospitality and good cheer.

On the 7th of March, 1907, was solemnized the marriage of Mr. Downie to Miss Leona Hulverson, who likewise was born and reared in this county and who is a daughter of Lars L, and Isabel (Thompson) Hulverson, honored citizens of Boardman township. Mr. and Mrs. Downie have a winsome little daughter, Marjorie Lillian, who was born on the 5th of November, 1912.

source: History of Clayton County, Iowa; From The Earliest Historical Times Down to the Present; by Realto E. Price, Vol. II, 1916; pg. 94-96

-OCR scanned by S. Ferrall

 

Return to 1916 Biographies Index