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Source: "Portrait and Biographical Record - Published 1894 by Excelsior Publishing Co., Chicago" Pages 398 - 399
Harmon Pierce has been identified with the history of Sheboygan County since its infancy, and is one of its oldest
settlers. He owns a good farm on sections 27 and 28, Sheboygan Falls Township. He was born in Brookfield, Worcester
County, Mass., March 11, 1817. His parents were Levi and Lucy Pierce, who had a family of two sons and four
daughters, of whom our subject is the sole survivor. The father was born in Plymouth County, Mass., and followed the
trade of a carpenter. He worked on the old State House in Boston, and afterward removed to a small farm in Worcester
County, where the birth of our subject occurred. The Pierce family traces its ancestry back as far as 1317, when
they were residents of England. Members of the family came to America as early as 1623.
Until our subject was twenty-five years old he continued to live with his parents. He often worked from sun to sun
for neighboring farmers at fifty cents per day, and at last came to the conclusion that he could do better in the
West. He proceeded as far as Detroit by water and made the rest of the journey overland. Traveling, in those days,
was a very difficult matter, as there were few roads and only Indian trails in much of the country. Both Sheboygan
and Sheboygan Falls were settlements of about three families each, and the whole county numbered less than five
hundred inhabitants. The settlers depended on the Indians for most of their meat, for which they would trade
potatoes. Deer were very plentiful, and a good hunter could secure as much game as he desired. The whole country was
a primitive wilderness and the howl of wolves was often heard at night. Mr. Pierce was a miller by trade, and made
the first superfine flour in the county, in his mill just below the bridge, opposite the present site of the
Brickner Woolen Mills of Sheboygan Falls. This was in 1844, he being one of the company who owned the plant.
On the 28th of March, 1846, our subject married Miss Tryphena S. Patten, and unto them were born five sons and two
daughters, five of whom are living: Levi H., who is on the old homestead; Ara P., who is engaged in gardening; Azel
R., a farmer of Buffalo County; Daniel S., a traveling man; and Olive T., wife of E. C. Coffin, a telegraph operator
of Minneapolis. Lucy E. died at the age of seventeen years, and the mother was called from this life in August,
1878. The second marriage of Mr. Pierce was with Mrs. Maggie Hotchkiss, widow of M. D. Hotchkiss, the wedding being
celebrated July 28, 1879. She is a native of New York, born in Tioga County, January 1, 1831, and is the eldest of
the eight children of Ralph and Charlotte Ross. The former came to Wisconsin in May, 1846, and was well known here
as "Deacon" Ross. For over a quarter of a century he was sexton of the Congregational Church of Sheboygan, and rang
the bell at the Peace Jubilee, held at the close of the Civil War. One of his children, Sarah, is the wife of George
Pope, of Harlan County, Neb., and his son, Lester E., is engaged in the incubator business in Massachusetts.
One of the first to respond to his country's call when she was in need of patriotic sons, was Mr. Pierce, who
enlisted April 19, 1861, and carried the first flag out of Sheboygan County. With his regiment he was sent to defend
the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, south of the Relay House, between Baltimore and Washington, where a heavy guard was
needed. He was under command of Gen. Butler on the Gulf campaign, and was employed in keeping New Orleans in order
for some time. In 1862 he was ordered to go to Vicksburg, which proved too strong to venture an attack, and he
therefore returned to Baton Rouge. On the 28th of July, 1862, he received an honorable discharge, on account of
disability, as he had sustained a severe injury to his right knee while building a fort near Baltimore. This injury
has been a permanent one and he receives a much-deserved pension. He has always been a solid Republican, and cast
his first vote for William Henry Harrison, the Whig candidate of the "Tippecanoe and Tyler, too" campaign. He has
never accepted or desired local offices, but has ever had the interests of his county and the public schools at
heart. Since 1847 he has been connected with the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, in which he takes a great
interest, and is also a member of Richardson Post No. 12, G. A. R., of Sheboygan Falls. Though not a member of any
church organization, he is a man of upright principles, and endeavors to promote all measures which will uplift
mankind.
When Mr. Pierce commenced his life as an agriculturist, he had only about $75 to invest, and his first purchase was
an unimproved tract of eighty acres, to which he later added fifty acres more. He now lives with his wife on a
beautiful little plat of two and a-half acres, one mile from Sheboygan Falls, where he intends to pass his remaining
years.
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