History of Reno County, Kansas; its people, industries and institutions . .^gr RENO COUNTY, KANSAS. 609 of which his wife also was an earnest member, and their chikhen were rearedin that faith. There were six of these children, Charles, Edward, George,John U., Lucy and I latlic. ihc elder brother, Charles, is still living atPittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The two daughters, I)olh of wliom are marriedand still living, long have made their home in Omaha, Nebraska. GeorgeSchoonover died from illness contracted during his the Unionarmy at the time of the Civil War. In 1853 the Widow Schoonove


History of Reno County, Kansas; its people, industries and institutions . .^gr RENO COUNTY, KANSAS. 609 of which his wife also was an earnest member, and their chikhen were rearedin that faith. There were six of these children, Charles, Edward, George,John U., Lucy and I latlic. ihc elder brother, Charles, is still living atPittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The two daughters, I)olh of wliom are marriedand still living, long have made their home in Omaha, Nebraska. GeorgeSchoonover died from illness contracted during his the Unionarmy at the time of the Civil War. In 1853 the Widow Schoonover movedwath her younger children to Nevada, in Story county, Iowa, where she spenther last days, her death occurring in the early sixties. John U. Schoonover received his elementary education in the schoolsof Kenton and Nevada, Iowa. He was thirteen years of age when hewent to Iowa with his mother, who died three years later. At a little lessthan eighteen years of age he enlisted for service in the Union army duringthe Civil War in Company E, Third Regiment, Iowa Volun


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookpublisherindia, bookyear1917