|
CHARLES VAN GORDER.
We of a later generation who are enjoying the comforts and even the luxuries of this modern day civilization owe
much to the earlier pioneers; in fact, it is difficult to place a proper estimate upon their services for the benefit
of the generations who follow after them. They blazed the trails and bore the brunt of the first hard and difficult
battle in the redemption of a wilderness. Their foresight and optimism enabled them to see into the distant future
and vision the productive and fertile farms, the beautiful towns and cities, the grid ironing the country with
the steam railroads; all of which were to transform the wide stretches of prairie lands and the rolling hills into
a veritable storehouse of wealth which would afford sustenance for innumerable thousands. It was the pioneer who
transported his family and meager possessions by horse wagon or slow moving ox team from the haunts of civilization
across the lonely stretches to the far distant uninhabited country and there erected his cabin on the spot of his
choice. He came, he saw, he conquered, despite the vicissitudes and hardships which of necessity were the lot of
him and his family. He likewise reaped his reward in the inevitable prosperity which followed in the wake of the
settlement of the new country. This was no more than his just desert. A high type of the pioneer is found in the
person of the man whose name heads this review, Capt. Charles Van Gorder, one of the pioneer settlers and bankers
of Audubon county, who has resided in this county for fifty four years.
During his long residence in Audubon county Captain Van Gorder has seen the land transformed from grass and flower
covered prairie and hill lands into a smiling landscape of fertile farms and thriving towns. He has seen the trail
succeeded by the old stagecoach; in turn he has seen the stagecoach supplanted by the steam railway and the automobile
coming as a more modern means of conveyance, and very properly is one of the most highly honored and respected
citizens in the county.
Charles Van Gorder, vice president of the First National Bank of Audubon, this county, was born in Delaware county,
New York, on January 23, 1837, the direct descendant of an old Holland family which figured in the colonial life
of the Empire state. He is the son of Simon Van Gorder, whose grandgather, John Van Gorder, was born in the Dutch
settlement of Delaware county, New York, in the ancestral home of the family. John Van Gorder was the father of
William, John, Abram, Isaac, Lawrence, Albert and Manuel Van Gorder. Lawrence Van Gorder, the father of Simon Van
Gorder, resided in Orange and Ulster counties of New York. His other sons were Hiram, Charles, John, Lawrence and
Calvin, all of whom lived to be over ninety years of age. Four of the sons of John Van Gorder settled in the Lake
county of New York state.
Simon Van Gorder, upon attaining his majority, moved to Delaware county, New York, and thence, in 1843, to Bradford
county, Pennsylvania, where he died in October, 189o. His wife was Jane Fish, a native of New York, daughter of
Isaac Fish, a native of Connecticut, who settled in Delaware county, New York, early in the nineteenth century.
To Simon and Jane (Fish) Van Gorder were born the following children: Maria Antoinette, deceased; Mrs. Lorane Hodge,
deceased; Billings, of Chemung county, New York; Charles, of whom this chronicle treats; John, deceased; R. B.,
a resident of Chemung county, New York; Mrs. Sarah J. Kirkpatrick, residing in Bradford county, Pennsylvania, and
H. Wallace, a citizen of Chemung county, New York.
Charles Van Gorder was reared on a wilderness farm, he having been but six years of age when his father removed
to the wilds of Bradford county, Pennsylvania, and entered on the task of carving a farm from the dense forests.
There were no school facilities in this primitive country and Charles did not attend school until he had attained
the age of seventeen years. This schooling was very limited, however, and he did not succeed in securing the education
which his ambition craved. It is a fact that he did not finish his education until after he came to the West, and
he attended school for two years after he had attained the age of thirty years. When he was nineteen years of age,
Charles Van Gorder left home with the parental blessing and little else to fortify himself with, and migrated to
Henry county, Illinois. In the spring of 1857 he made the long overland journey to Kansas. Kansas, at this period
of her history, was earning the sobriquet of "bleeding Kansas" and was the fighting ground of Abolitionist
and slave holding advocate. The young adventurer saw troublous times during his stay in that territory, and after
traveling over the western country for some time he settled in Bates county, Missouri. He resided in Missouri for
three years, or until 186o, in which year he came to Iowa, choosing Audubon county as his place of residence, and
settled in the town of Exira. During his long residence in Audubon county, Mr. Van Gorder has made three trips
across the plains to Pike's Peak and return.
In 1861 Charles Van Gorder engaged in the manufacture of bricks in Exira and was doing a thriving business in the
sale and manufacture of his product to the incoming settlers and homesteaders, when the President called for troops
with which to quell the rebellion in the Southern states. Mr. Van Gorder, in whose veins flowed the blood of a
long line of sturdy American ancestors and lovers of the Union, was one of the brave sons of Iowa to respond in
1862. He enlisted on August 22, 1862, in Company B, Thirty ninth Regiment, Iowa Volunteer Infantry, and served
for two years and ten months. His field service was with his regiment in Tennessee, Mississippi, Alabama and Georgia.
The principal engagements in which he fought were at Parker's Cross Roads, Tennessee; Cherokee Station, Alabama;
Resaca, Georgia, and Altona Pass. During the latter engagement he was wounded in the left foot and invalided for
six months. Entering the service as a private, he presently was promoted to the position of a corporal and rapidly
rose to be a sergeant, then a lieutenant and finally a captain, which was his rank when he was mustered out with
Sherman's army at Washington, D. C., following the grand review. Captain Van Gorder was paid off and received his
final discharge at Clinton, Iowa.
After the war Captain Van Gorder resumed the manufacture of bricks in Exira, varying the time with a trip across
the plains to Pike's Peak in 1867. He also for a time clerked in a general store in Exira. In the year 1869 he
was elected to the office of county treasurer and served for two terms of two years each. From 1874 to 1876 he
was engaged in the real estate business. In the year 1876 his banking career began and he started the Audubon County
Bank at Exira. In 1878, when Audubon was laid out and building had commenced in the new county seat town, he decided
that it would prove to be a better location for his banking business. Consequently the business was moved to the
new city. Captain Van Gorder erected a building in Audubon and conducted a primate bank until 1893, when the First
National Bank succeeded the Audubon County Bank. Captain Van Gorder also is interested in the Exchange Bank at
Exira, and for some time he has occupied the post of vice president of the institution of which he is the founder.
He has large land holdings in Iowa, the Dakotas, Canada and Texas.
On November 28, 1869, Charles Van Gorder was married to Laura J. Delahoyde, daughter of an early settler in Audubon
county, and to this union have been born four children, three of whom are yet living, namely: Edwin S., president
of the First National Bank of Audubon, this county; Sydney S., also of Audubon, and Lowene J. Kirk, the wife of
Willing D. Kirk, of the great soap manufacturing company of the same name, and a resident of Glencoe, near Chicago.
Robert Bruce Van Gorder, the deceased son, died in Audubon in 1907.
Politically, Capt. Charles Van Gorder, estimable gentleman and pioneer settler, has always been allied with the
Republican party, and takes a keen interest in political affairs, though never having been a seeker after public
office, except on the occasion of his election to the office of county treasurer. He is a member of the Ancient
Free and Accepted Lasons, in which order he has attained to the chapter and the commandery, and takes a just pride
in his membership in Allison Post, Grand Army of the Republic, of Audubon.
All honor is due this citizen who assisted in settling up the county in the pioneer days and was one of the few
men to enlist in the service of the Union during the days of the civil conflict. This volume would certainly be
incomplete were not the foregoing tribute and review inserted in its pages. The biographies of such men as Charles
Van Gorder, pioneer settler and banker, Union veteran and public spirited citizen, but enhance the value of a work
of this character and serve and as inspiration to encourage the young men of the present and coming generations.
From:
History of Audubon County, Iowa
Its People, Industries and Instutions
H. F. Andrews, Editor
B. F. Bowen & Company, Inc.
Indianapolis - 1915
Privacy Policy for
OnlineBiographies
|
NAVIGATION
Audubon County Biographies
Online -
Biographies
Illinois
Histories
Michigan
Histories
Also see [ Railway Officials in America 1906
] NEW
For all your genealogy needs visit Linkpendium
|