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					VanEaton, G. L.
					
					   
					Of the men who have made a success in mercantile pursuits 
					without the advantages bestowed by a college education, none 
					are more conspicuous than G. L. VanEaton, of Little Rock. 
					His father was a Hollander and his mother a Quaker, and from 
					that strong combination he inherited the qualities which 
					have won for him such signal success in the avenues of 
					trade. Born in Boone county, Ind., he attended the inferior 
					schools of those pioneer days, and enlisted in the civil war 
					before he was 18 years of age, so that his educational 
					advantages were very limited indeed. During his early life 
					he never suffered himself to remain idle, although for a 
					considerable time he was obliged to work for the mere 
					pittance of $6 per month. When the war for the preservation 
					of the union was necessary, he was among the first to offer 
					his services in defense of the stars and stripes, and was 
					accepted September 1, 1861, at Berlin, Wis. He participated 
					in the battles of Shiloh, Corinth, Iuka, the second fight at 
					Corinth, and was on the march with Grant to Vicksburg. The 
					term of his first enlistment having expired, he re-enlisted 
					at Vicksburg in the fall of 1863, and immediately thereafter 
					secured a furlough for thirty days. Following a brief visit 
					at his home, he went to Cairo, and thence up the Ohio and 
					Tennessee rivers to Clifton, where he joined the forces of 
					General Blair and marched to Big Shanty. He was then 
					transferred to the Seventeenth corps, in which he served 
					until mustered out of the service July 12, 1865. In 1872 Mr. 
					VanEaton came to Iowa and took up a homestead in Osceola 
					county, and the land has never passed out of his ownership. 
					Aside from the time spent in military service, his whole 
					life, up to 1885, was spent upon the farm. During that year 
					he purchased a one-half interest in the lumber, wood, coal 
					and grain business of Mr. L. Shell, at Little Rock, and the 
					partnership then formed continues to the present time with 
					profit and satisfaction to both parties. 
					 
					Transcribed by: 
					T. Stover - August 16, 2007 
					Source: Gue, B.F., "Biographies and Portraits of 
					the Progressive Men of Iowa," Des Moines, Iowa, USA: 
					Conaway & Shaw Publishers, 1899, p 147. 
  
					  
					
					 
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