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James McAffee was the son of Alexander
McAffee and Jane McCarty.
Born in Bradford, Co. Penn., 18 August 1827, he died at Roscoe,
Ill., 30 March 1901 on the former Cross farm (Sec. 29 & 32)
on the road from Roscoe to Rockton.
See Gravestone picture.
He came with his parents to Roscoe in 1839. They had a brick
home south of Roscoe at the west side of the intersection of
McDonald Road and North Second street. Following his father's
death, he carried on at the McAffee farm and, married Almeda
McCausland (date unknown). She was from Ridott, Ill., a native of
Canada, and the daughter of William McCausland. She died in 1856,
leaving one daughter, Almeda, "Meda". Meda was born 10 July 1856
and died 29
November 1939, Waverly, Bremer Co., Iowa.
He, and his brother Edwin, was in the Civil War. He enlisted
August of 1862 and received a medical discharge 7 January 1863.
The discharge certificate reads: "
To all whom it may Concern
Know Ye, James McAffee, a Sergeant of Captain Elias Cosper's
Company, (E) of the 74th. Illinois Regiment of the United
States Volunteers Infantry was enlisted by Capt. J. B.
Kew of the....... Regiment of.... at Harlem, Winnebago
Co., Illinois, on the 11th. day of August 1862,
to serve 3 years; he was born in the U. S. of America, is
thirty five years of age, five feet nine
inches high, light complexion, blue eyes,
Brown hair, and by occupation when enlisted a
Farmer. During the last two months said soldier has been
unfit for duty 60 days. (Surgeon's diagnosis is written
here but, difficult to read). Discharged this seventh day
of January 1863, at Bowling Green, Ky.
M.D.Manson, Br'g. Gen'l, Commanding the Post.
(Words in italics are hand written on blank spaces in
document.)
From DAR info-
MCAFEE, JAMES Ancestor #: A074347 Service:
PENNSYLVANIA Rank(s): PRIVATE Birth: 1745 CO ANTRIM IRELAND
Death: 1814 MILTON-BUR NORTHUMBERLAND CO PENNSYLVANIA Service
Source: PA ARCH, 5TH SER, VOL 4, PP 357, 371 Service Description:
1) NORTHUMBERLAND CO MILITIA CL Residence 1) City: TURBUTT TWP
-County: NORTHUMBERLAND CO -State: PENNSYLVANIA Spouse 1) JANE
DURHAM
On March 22, 1866, he remarried to Margaret L. Cross., She was
born 21 April 1839 in Roscoe, Ill., Daughter of Robert J. Cross
and Hannah Benedict.
They had three children;
+1) Hannah Jane who married to Peter
Wm. Ralston, a civil engineer in Chicago.
2) Julia E. who married Earnest
Worcester, a Chicago architect.
3) James C., a civil Engineer at the Chicago Columbia
Exposition.
The following is from The 'Rockford Daily Register-Gazette'
"Mr. McAffee still lives but is gradually fading". "War Veteran
Mustered Out...Roscoe, Ill., Mar. 30...James McAffee, who has
been lingering between life and death for some days past,
breathed his last this morning. He served in the Civil War as a
Private in Co. E, 74th. Illinois Volunteers and was a member of
Nevius Post G.A.R. He is survived by his wife, one son and three
daughters. Funeral services will be held Monday afternoon at 1:30
from the house and 2:00 from the Methodist Church."
The following is from Portrait and Biographical Record of
Winnebago and Boone Counties, Illinois Chicago, Ill., 1892,
Biographical Publishing Co.:
"James McAffee was originally from the Keystone State, born in
Bradford County in August, 1827, and his father Alexander
McAffee, was also a native of that State but was born in
Northumberland County in 1798. The elder Mr. McAffee married Miss
Jane McCarty, of Lycoming County Pa., born at Muncy in 1800, and
one of thirteen children. The result of this union was nine
children, four sons and five daughters, two of whom died in early
childhood. Of the seven that grew to adult years, only four now
survive, and they are Amanda, now Mrs. Henry A. Fahnestock, at
Waverly, Iowa; Mary A., widow of Melvin J. Wood, resides in
Roscoe, Ill.; Edwin, a farmer of Audubon County, Iowa, and our
subject, who is the eldest of the family. The parents of these
children came West from Pennsylvania in October, 1838, made the
journey with teams, and landed in Roscoe on the 31st. of January,
1839. While on the way to this State, they were in Michigan, near
South Bend, Ind., for a short time, and the father and his
brother John came on to Roscoe Township, where they bought a
claim of four hundred acres one-half mile from the (then) village
of Roscoe. They paid $440 for this tract, and, although fifteen
acres had been cultivated, there was no house on it. They
immediately erected a double log house and then returned for the
family. Here the father passed the remainder of his days, dying
of an abscess in March, 1852, when not quite fifty four years of
age. His wife remained a widow and survived him twenty-six years,
keeping the family together until about 1870, when she went to
live with her daughter. About this time the old place was sold
for $4,500. Mrs. McAffee died in March, 1878, when about
seventy-eight years of age, her death occurring in Iowa, where
she was visiting her daughter.
"James McAffee, subject of this sketch, and his brother Edwin
were volunteers in the Civil War. The former enlisted in the
Seventy-fourth Illinois Infantry as a Sergeant, August, 1862, and
was discharged for disability in January of the following year.
(He applied for Invalid Pension in 1899) He and his brothers and
sisters were all fairly educated, and our subject, being a man of
observation and study, has not allowed his ideas to rust out, but
is well informed on all subjects and is thoroughly apace with the
times. After the death of his father, he carried on the farm and
was married to Miss Almeda McCausland, of Ridott, Ill., but a
native of Canada. Her father was William McCausland. Mrs. Almeda
McAffee passed away in 1856, leaving one daughter, Meda, who is a
resident of Iowa at the present time. Mr. McAffee's second
marriage was to Miss Margaret L. Cross, a native of Roscoe, born
in that city (or rather town at the time) in 1839. Her father,
Robert J. Cross, was a native of Newburgh, N. Y., but moved to
near Detroit, Mich., in 1825 and thence to Coldwater in 1830.
Five years later, he came to Roscoe, Ill., where he became a
successful agriculturist. He was quite a prominent man in the
county and held many positions of trust and honor. He was the
first County Commissioner appointed in 1836 and was the first
County Treasurer appointed by the County Commissioners, serving
in that capacity for three years. In 1846, he was elected by the
Whigs of Winnebago County to represent them in the General
Assembly and in 1846 and 1847 he was a colleague of Judge Church
to revise the State Constitution. He was a profound thinker, a
deep reasoner, and one of the ablest men the county has ever had.
He died in February, 1873, when sixty-nine years of age, and was
at that time a member of the General Assembly from Winnebago and
Boone Counties. His wife and four children still survive him. One
son, John, is in Kansas; Margaret L. became the wife of our
subject; William Henry is a Congregational minister of
California, and Lewis is a farmer of Iowa. The mother of these
children was born July 21, 1812, and, although nearly eighty
years of age, is as bright mentally as ever, but her physical
condition is not of the best.
"Mr. and Mrs. McAffee have been farmers in this section nearly
all their lives and settled on the present farm, consisting of
one hundred and thirty-five acres, which formerly constituted the
home place of Mr. Cross. Their union has been blessed by the
birth of three children, two daughters and one son: Hannah J.,
now Mrs. P. W. Ralston, residing in Chicago, her husband being a
civil engineer; Julia E., now Mrs. Ernest I. Worcester, of
Chicago, her husband an architect, and James C., a civil engineer
working on the Columbian Exposition grounds, Chicago. Mr. McAffee
is virtually a retired farmer, although living on the farm, which
he has rented out for a number of years. He was born and reared a
Democrat, but since 1860 has affiliated with the Republican
party, although he is free to vote for the best man always."
There is an interesting story told about James during the
early days of Roscoe. It seems that one of the first buildings
used for a school and church had planks instead of stairs. "It is
said of James McAffee that on one occasion he rode a borrowed
horse up the planks in the church, and it took all the available
men in town to get the horse down."
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