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OWEN / OWENS BIOGRAPHIES, Henry County, Missouri
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OWEN, John - b: 1844 KY
source: 1919 History of Henry Co MO, Uel W. Lamkin, Historical Publishing Co - 
page: 634
residence: Honey Creek Twp

John Owen, of Honey Creek township, is a Henry County pioneer and perhaps the 
oldest settler in Honey Creek township, where he has lived for sixty-five years. 
He was born in Kentucky in 1844, and is a son of David Owen, who was born near 
Murfreesboro, Tennessee, and spent a large portion of his early life in Louisiana 
and Kentucky, leaving home when a boy, and for forty years his people heard 
nothing from him. He came to Lexington, Missouri, in 1848, and to Henry County in 
1853. He located in Fields Creek township, where he entered six hundred twenty 
acres of Government land and bought three hundred eighty acres, and at one time 
owned one thousand acres. Before his death he deeded all his land to his children. 
He died in 1893 at the age of eighty-three years, and his remains were buried in 
Fields Creek Cemetery. His wife, Sarah Ann Campbell, was born in Russell County, 
Kentucky, in 1826, and died in Honey Creek township in 1865. The Owen family is 
of old American stock. David Owen's father, grandfather of John Owen, was with 
General Jackson at the Battle of New Orleans. He enlisted in Tennessee. David 
Owen was a nephew of David Crockett's wife, and he was named for David 
Crockett. Sarah Ann Campbell, was also a descendant of old American stock, of 
Scotch and Irish descent who served in the Revolutionary War. To David and Sarah 
Ann (Campbell) Owen were born the following children: John, the subject of this 
sketch; Mrs. Augusta Chrisman, Clinton, Missouri; Mrs. Alice Blackwell; Mrs. Edna 
Bush, deceased; Quitman resides in Montana; Mrs. Josie McBride, Mountain View, 
Oklahoma; and Charles, Sherman, Texas. John Owen was reared amid the scenes of 
pioneer life, receiving a limited education. He bought his first piece of land in 
Honey Creek township, where he has spent sixty-five years of his life and where 
he has built up a reputation for honesty and integrity that might well be the envy 
of any man. In 1875, Mr. Owen was united in marriage with Miss Louisa Waddell, 
daughter of James and Louisa Waddell, both now deceased. To this union were 
born twelve children, as follows: Nancy, Oles P., Jurina, William, Louisa, Emma, 
Nichols, Belle, Ada, Ella, Lizzie, and George. During his sixty-five years of 
residence in Henry County, John Owen has seen this section develop from an 
unsettled waste to a populous community. When he came here in 1853, a boy of 
nine years, Indians were plentiful here, and he remembers of having seen them 
camped in the vicinity of Cook's old mill, where they were engaged in fishing and 
hunting. The Indians offered for sale venison at ridiculously low prices, compared 
with the high cost of living of today. Mr. Owen is one of the honored pioneers of 
Henry County, who is entitled to much credit for the part that he has taken in the 
development of the banner county of Missouri. 

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OWENS, Benjamin L. - b: 1824 Lafayette Co, MO
source: 1883 History of Henry Missouri , National Historical Co. - page: 535
residence: Clinton Twp

Benjamin L. Owens, section 12. Among the prominent and successful men of this 
county may be mentioned the subject of this sketch. He is a native of Lafayette 
County, Missouri, and was born March 8, 1824. His father, Abel Owens, was born 
in North Carolina, and settled near the present site of Lexington, Lafayette 
County, in 1818. His mother, formerly Elizabeth Gooch, also came originally from 
the same state. They reared a family of eight children, of whom Benjamin was 
the youngest. His father died in 1834, and his mother's death occurred April 9, 
1873. Benjamin L. was a resident of Lafayette County till thirteen years of age, 
when he removed to Platte County, Missouri, there being brought up among the 
pioneers. In the spring of 1846 he enlisted for the Mexican war with Captain 
Owens' company, of Colonel Price's regiment, with which he served fourteen 
months. He was then paroled and returned to Platte County, and after a short 
residence there came to Henry County, Missouri, in the fall of 1847, settling 
after a time on Honey Creek. Here he farmed till 1853, and in that year moved on 
his present place. His estate consists of 700 acres of well improved land, and he 
is one of the largest and most successful stock dealers and feeders in the county. 
Mr. Owens was married April 24, 1849, to Miss Francis J. Sweeney, a daughter of 
Jonathan Sweeney, who came from Kentucky to Henry County in 1840, and died 
where he had settled, May 28, 1852. They have six children living, Ermine, Walter 
E., Nora L, George H., and Maude and Fred, twins. Mr. O. is a member of the Masonic 
order, and also belongs to the Cumberland Presbyterian Church. In 1873 he was 
elected a member of the county court, serving in that position for four years.

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