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Source: "Commemorative Biographical Record of the Upper Wisconsin" Chicago; J. H. Beers & Co. 1895
Thomas Morgan, one of the successful farmers of Lanark township, Portage
County, has lived an eventful and active life. He was a brave soldier
in the war of the Rebellion, and fought gallantly on many a hard-won
battlefield. He has been actively interested in the lumbering interests
of Wisconsin, and has in his time contracted a large quantity of timber.
Now a prominent farmer, his station and standing in life have come to
him through his own personal efforts.
Mr. Morgan was born in Ireland May 29, 1843. His mother, Elizabeth Reynolds,
was the daughter of a Scotchman, and his father, William Morgan, born in
June, 1818, was of Welsh extraction and a mason by trade. In his youth he
had visited Canada, and returning to Ireland he there married Miss Reynolds,
January 21, 1841. Three years after his marriage the young mason with his
wife and son Thomas emigrated to Canada, five years later, in 1849, coming
to Wisconsin. He followed his trade for a time at Sheboygan Falls, then
bought forty acres of new land in Cato Township, Manitowoc County. There
were no roads here, and Mr. Morgan carried provisions on his hack from
Manitowoc, a distance of twelve miles. In the fall of 1860 he removed to
Rantoul township, Calumet county, then a new county also, but with some
improvements. In May, 1861, he enlisted at Chilton in Company K, Fourth
Wis. V. I., and while on his way home on a furlough, died at Fond du Lac,
September 25, 1863; he was buried at Chilton. The children of William
Morgan were: Thomas; William, who was born in Canada July 24, 1845, and
died in Los Angeles, Cal., December 5, 1890 (he was a member of Company
E, Fourteenth Wis. V. I.); George, born in Canada, and died January 1,
1852, in Sheboygan county; Eleanor, who was born in Canada, August 2, 1849,
married Frank Powers, and died in Wausau, Wis., October 26, 1876; David,
born in Sheboygan County, April 1, 1852, a farmer of Farmington township,
Waupaca county; Reynolds, born June 13, 1855, in Manitowoc county, Wis.,
and died in Wausau, Wis., December 19, 1875; Mary A., born September 16,
1857, married Ed Ross, and died January 2, 1894, in Farmington township,
Waupaca county, Wis.; Elizabeth, born January 13, 1859, now Mrs. D. Alton
Ross, of Waupaca. The death of Mr. Morgan left his widow and children in
straitened circumstances. Heroically she struggled to keep the little ones
together until her death, in February, 1866. Typhoid fever had entered the
family, and the widow, worn down by her constant attendance at the bedside
of her three children, contracted the disease and succumbed to its ravages
She was buried by her patriot husband's side, at Chilton cemetery.
Thomas Morgan, the eldest child, began attending school in Canada, and
later received some instruction in Wisconsin. In Manitowoc County his father
and neighbors organized the first school in the neighborhood. When the
Rebellion first broke out, Thomas, then nearly eighteen, was anxious to
enlist, but the father had gone, and for a few months the entreaties of the
mother prevailed; in September of that year, however, he went to Sheboygan
Falls, and there enlisted in Company H, First Wis. V. I., which had served
its three-months' term and was reorganized for three years. From Milwaukee
the regiment proceeded to Jeffersonville, Ind. After a month's drilling
there it crossed the Ohio into Kentucky, and first met the enemy at Salt
River; then it participated in the desperate struggle at Perryville, Ky.,
October 8, 1862, and here he was slightly wounded by a bayonet thrust.
Stone River and Chickamauga followed. In the latter severe engagement Mr.
Morgan was three times captured, and each time he escaped, an incident that
is in itself proof of the protracted and hand-to-hand struggle in which the
First Wisconsin was engaged. The regiment, and with it Mr. Morgan,
participated in all the battles of that campaign; it was at Missionary
Ridge and Lookout Mountain, and in the operations around Chattanooga and
Nashville; it entered upon the Atlanta campaign, and took part in the
engagements around that city. At Jonesboro, Ga., September 1, 1864, Mr.
Morgan fired his last shot. His term of service had expired. His mother at
home was a widow, struggling to support her family. He had been sending her
his pay as a soldier, but he felt that she needed his personal assistance.
In November he was honorably discharged at Milwaukee, and came to Chilton.
For a year he engaged in farming. He then went South, to Clarksville, Tenn.,
and took a farm of 400 acres to work on shares. There he remained a year and
a half, and was offered a good salary to stay longer, hut he did not like the
country. The war feeling had not yet subsided, and his life was constantly
endangered. Returning to Wisconsin in the spring of 1867, he took the
contract for the building of twenty-five miles of fence along the Chicago &
North Western railroad between Des Moines and Council Bluffs, Iowa.
In the fall he returned to Chilton, Wis., and there he was married, November
14, 1867, to Eunice Breed, a native of Sharon, Penn., daughter of J. H. and
Olive (Lawton) Breed, the former of whom was a merchant and hotel proprietor
in the city of her birth. After marriage Mr. Morgan rented a farm in Rantoul
Township, Calumet County. A year later he gave up farming and entered the
lumber woods, taking charge of a camp. He followed this life until 1890, and
for nine years he worked for one firm. During the last winter he put in
14,000,000 feet of lumber. In 1880 Mr. Morgan had purchased a farm in Section
3, Lanark Township, and excepting the winter of 1884-85 the family has ever
since resided there. A record of the names and dates of the birth of his
children is as follows: John T., January 11, 1869; William G., September 1,
1872, died June 16, 1874; David H., April 29, 1877; Frank L., March 13, 1882;
Olive E., July 25, 1885; Ray E., January 1, 1888. Mr. Morgan owns a farm of
180 acres, and has erected all the substantial buildings it contains. He is
a stanch Republican, and is now serving his third term as chairman of the
township. Himself and family attend the M. E. Church. As a thoroughly self-
made man, as a representative citizen of the township, as an experienced
lumberman, as a kindhearted father and husband, and as an obliging neighbor,
Mr. Morgan is highly esteemed and respected by all who know him.
Copyright 1997 - 2009 by Debie Blindauer
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