**************************************************************************** File contributed to the Fulton County ILGenWeb Project Copyright 2008, all rights reserved. These electronic pages cannot be reproduced in any format without the written consent of the author at http://fulton.ilgenweb.net. **************************************************************************** Source: Portrait and Biographical Album of Fulton County Biographical Publishing Co., Chicago, 1890 **************************************************************************** The Biography of Rev. Alexander H. WIDNEY Pages 500 and 503, transcribed in full by Danni Hopkins [Surnames: NORTON, WIDNEY, WIGENT] REV. ALEXANDER H. WIDNEY. For more than thirty years this gentleman has been aiding in the spread of the gospel, devoting himself with assiduity and loving zeal to the work of the ministry. The center of his present field of labor is the town of Cuba, where he has held a pastorate for over two years. He is a man of broad intelligence, decided literary ability, and the dignified yet winning manners so thoroughly in keeping with his profession. The ancestors of our subject settled in Ireland in the year 1688, John Widney having been a colonel in the army of William, Prince of Orange, and having received a valuable estate in County Tyrone, in consideration of services rendered in the war between William and James. John Widney, father of our subject, was born at Ernyvale, Ireland, in the year 1779, and at the age of five years was brought by his father to America. The family settled in the upper part of Path Valley, Franklin County, Pa., whence the descendants of the two brothers and three sisters who settled in this rugged region together, scattered to various portions of the United States. Our subject was born July 29, 1834, in Toboyne Township, Perry County, Pa., and is the youngest son in a family of eleven children. At the age of three years he lost his father by death, and the family soon after following the spirit of adventure, became identified with the early settlement of Northeastern Indiana. They made a home on the Little St. Joseph River, DeKalb County, Ind. There an older brother, who had received a good education in the East, became a school-teacher for the early pioneers, and would often take his younger brother on his back and carry him a distance of two or three miles through the unbroken forest to the log schoolhouse where he taught. In the year 1848, at the age of fourteen, our subject left his widowed mother, and returned to the old home in Pennsylvania, where for five years he apprenticed himself to his eldest brother, who was the proprietor of a wagon shop. Returning to Indiana in 1853, he began his struggle for an education by teaching a district school at $15 a month, he to have his board among the people. But boarding around was not pleasant, and he took the only alternative, securing his own boarding place. His pedagogical labors were followed by two years of close application to study at the LaGrange Institute at Ontario, Ind., and he then began in a small way the work of the ministry in the Methodist Protestant Church. For thirteen years Mr. Widney pursued his chosen profession in Indiana, traveling the extensive circuits of that day, and often preaching five or six times each week. During the fall of 1858, while on a circuit in Fountain County, he was seized with the terrible disease known as "milk sick," and nearly lost his life. In the struggle through which the church passed in 1857-58 over the slavery question, Mr. Widney was branded as an Abolitionist, and the doors of one of the churches on his charge were shut against him. In 1869 he removed to Illinois, wherein, with the exception of three years, his subsequent life has been spent and his labors expended. During the three years, from 1877 to 1880, the Rev. Mr. Widney was settled in Copiah County, Miss., on what is now the Illinois Central Railroad. The removal to the South was for the benefit of his health, his throat having become diseased. In those years Mr. Widney improved a small fruit farm, and traveled extensively through the "piney woods," preaching whenever called upon to do so, and writing up that country for the Northern press. In 1880 he returned to Illinois, since which time he has been pastor at Lima and Ursa, Adams County, for two years, DeLand and Weldon, DeWitt County, four years, one year each at Foosland and Clinton, and is now for the third year at Cuba. Mr. Widney has been for over thirty years a contributor to the religious press, chiefly of his own church, and occasionally to the secular papers. At present he is editor of the Cuba Journal, an independent paper in the village where he holds his pastorate. He enjoys the full confidence of the church in which for thirty-four years he has been a minister, and has been honored with membership in the General Conference, has been for four years a member of the Board of Missions, etc., etc. The good which the Rev. Mr. Widney has accomplished in the uplifting of humanity can only be measured when time shall be no more. Mr. Widney has been twice married. His first union was solemnized in 1856, his bride being Miss Martha A. Wigent, who died in 1866, leaving six children. The second union was with Mrs. Susan E. Norton, who is the mother of one son by Mr. Widney. Of the various members of his family, one daughter is a milliner, one son and one daughter are teachers, one son is managing a newspaper, one is a recent graduate of the Law School at Ann Arbor, and located at Denver, Colo., and one is clerking. The eldest son died at the age of fifteen years.