Goodbar - Derickson G
Source: H. W. Beckwith History of Montgomery County, Indiana, (Chicago: HH Hill, 1881), p. 416
D G. Goodbar, retired farmer, Whitesville, a grandson of
Joseph Goodbar, one of the two boys born in England and left
orphans, early in the last century. Joseph was taken by a sea
captain and followed a seafaring life. Returning to England and
failing to find his brother, he came to America and settled in
Virginia, and there he reared a family. His son John H., the
father of our subject, after his marriage to Miss Rachel
Hostetter, went to Kentucky, where he settled, farming for many
years. In 1829 he, with his family, excepting one son, came to
Montgomery County, Indiana, and settled in Scott township. He was
among the first to teach in the pioneer schools of the township.
He held the office of trustee of Scott township successively for
eighteen years, and represented this County one term in the state
legislature for a salary of two dollars per day. For many hears
his nearest market of La Fayette, Cincinnati, and points on the
Ohio river, through a vast wilderness without roads or bridges.
He came to the County by the usual mode, that of horses and
wagon, oxen and cart. Mr. Goodbar died in 1870 at the honorable
old age of eighty-seven years, after a long life of usefulness,
loved and respected by all who knew him. Dickison G. Goodbar was
born in Virginia, May 6, 1813. He came from Kentucky with his
parents, to this County, in 1829 and thus become one of the early
settlers. October 4, 1848, he married Miss Mary F. Prieste, a
native of Putnam County, Indiana, and January 6, 1850, his son,
John C., was born, and January 22 his wife died. He has never
since married, and is now living on his excellent farm of 400
acres in the northeast corner of Scott township, with his son,
who married Miss Kezia Epperson. She was born in Putnam County,
December 31, 1848. They have one son, Walter J., born February 2,
1872. ROSEBRIAR@EARTHLINK.NET Harry L Bounnell