1882 History of Linn
County, Missouri
BIOGRAPHY (S)
GUYER
HENRY D. Grantsville Township, page 856
Mr. Guyer is a
native of Madison county,
Kentucky,
where he was born May 10, 1818. He is a
son of John and Ellen (Hill) Guyer, the former born
in Virginia in 1798, dying March 31, 1854; the
latter was born in Stokes county, North Carolina, in 1792, and died October
26, 1842. The subject of this sketch
remained in Kentucky until 1834 when he
accompanied his father’s family to Cooper county, Missouri, where they remained until the
following year, when they came to where Linn county
now lies, the county not then having been organized. Mr. Guyer’s father
at first settled in the southeastern part of the county, near where St.
Catharine now stands; where Henry D. remained for three years and then returned
to Cooper county and lived with his uncle for eighteen
months, during which period he attended school a part of the time and worked
for his support the remainder. He then
went to Miller county, where he worked for his
brother-in-law for twelve months.
September 17, 1841, he was married to Elizabeth A. McComb,
who was born in Tennessee,
October 4, 1818. The marriage service
was performed by J. T. Davis. Mrs. Guyer’s father, Jacob M. McComb,
was born in Ireland about
the year 1772, and died in Texas
in 1866. He was a teacher by
profession. Her mother was Sarah Evans,
born in Georgia,
and who died in 1846. After his marriage
Mr. Guyer continued to reside in Miller county for about five years.
In 1843 he came to this county, purchased and settled on the farm where
he now lives, in Grantsville township. Mr. and Mrs. Guyer
had born to them nine children, all of whom are still living. Mrs. Guyer died
December 18, 1873, after a lingering illness of some twelve months. She was a consistent member of the Baptist Church and died in the hope of a
blissful immortality in the world beyond the tomb. November 17, 1874, Mr. Guyer
married Nancy Cotton, a sister of his first wife, and a native of Tennessee. In 1861, when the Civil War broke out, Mr. Guyer enrolled in the Missouri Militia, and was on duty at
intervals for about two years. He is a
member of the Baptist
Church. By his own exertions he has become a
prosperous farmer and the possessor of a fair competence of the world’s
goods. His children are: Sarah A., born June 21, 1841; John H., born
April 3, 1843; Thomas J., born May 31, 1845; Margaret J., born August 17, 1847;
Jacob M., born June 24, 1849; Eliza C., born September 12, 1853; James L., born
March 18, 1855; Mary E., born February 19, 1848 (out of order, or s/b 1858? kk); and William H., born
December 11, 1861. Four sons and two
daughters are married.
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JOHN H.
Grantsville Township., page 856
was born in Miller county, Missouri, on the third
of April, 1843. He is the eldest of a
family of nine children, and is a son of Mr. Henry D. Guyer,
whose biography is published elsewhere in this work. Our subject came to Linn county,
this State, with his father when the former was but five years old, and was
reared on the old Guyer farm in Grantsville
township. He obtained his education in
the schools of the county, which he attended during the winter season, while
living with his parents. In the fall of
1864 Mr. Guyer enlisted in Company A of the
Forty-second Regiment of Missouri Volunteer Infantry, and served till June 28,
1865, when he returned to his home in Linn county. He was married on the seventeenth day of June,
1866, to Miss Elizabeth Fosher, a native of Buchanan county, Missouri,
and born January 6, 1846. Their wedding
ceremony was performed by the Rev. Hustead. Seven children have been born of this union,
six of whom are still living. Their
names are: Walter E., Cora E., Henry A., Jennie C., Charles R., Elizabeth C.,
and John W. Mr. Guyer
owns a fine farm of six hundred acres in Grantsville township,
and has it well improved with good residence, barn and out-buildings, and it is
well supplied with live stock. He is an
industrious, useful member of society, and both himself
and wife belong to the Methodist Episcopal Church South.
* * * * * * * *
THOMAS J.
Grantsville Township., page 855
Mr. Guyer is a native of Missouri,
and was born in Miller county, May 31, 1845. His father, Mr. Henry D. Guyer,
is a native of Kentucky,
the date of his birth being May 10, 1818.
The mother of our subject bore the name of Elizabeth McComb,
before she was married to the elder Guyer. She was born in Tennessee, October 4, 1818, and died December
1873. When Thomas was one year old his
parents moved from Miller to Linn county, and settled
in Grantsville township. Mr. Guyer was reared on the farm, working thereon in the summer
and attending school during the winter months.
In the war of the
Rebellion his sympathies were with the Union cause, and he enrolled, in the
spring of 1863, in the Home Guard Militia, serving one year and a half. In July, 1864, he enrolled in company A, of
the Forty-second Missouri Volunteers, a regiment of infantry, his company being
commanded by Captain William H. Lewis.
He was on duty as a good soldier till he was honorably discharged in
August, 1865, when he returned to his home in Linn county. Soon afterwards he bought a farm in
Grantsville township near his old home, and worked it
for three years, making his home with his parents at their homestead. In 1871, Mr. Guyer was
married to Miss Jane Hague, who was born in Athens
county, Ohio,
on the eighth of March, 1840. Shortly
after his marriage, Mr. Guyer took his bride to his
farm, where they have ever since resided, he giving his attention to
agricultural pursuits. Besides what he
produces from his own farm, Mr. Guyer engages in
buying and shipping live-stock, and has visited, as a stock dealer, the States
of Iowa and Arkansas.
Mr. and Mrs. Guyer have had six children, five of whom are still livin. The names of
their offspring are as follows: Reuben H., Charles E., Thomas L., Allie M.,
Elbert H. (deceased), and Sarah J. Mr. Guyer is a strong advocate of truth and liberty, and is
every way a good citizen.
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Transcribed, in total, by kkfitch © 2008. All Rights Reserved.