James Smith Fry
February 14, 1854 - May12, 1915
James Smith Fry, a representative farmer
of Suffield Township, Portage County, Ohio, was born on
the old Fry homestead February 14, 1854, a son of Wyerman
and Martha (Brown) Fry, both natives of the Buckeye state.
His paternal grandparents were natives of Pennsylvania.
The grandfather served in the war of 1812, in the army
of the Center, afterward became an early settler of Stark
County, Ohio, where he was a shoemaker; from there he
moved to Suffield Township, Portage County, located on
a farm of 100 acres, on which he spent about a year and
a half, and died of a fever in 1828. Then his wife and
part of his family moved to Knox, Ind., where she died
in the year 1874. They were both members of the Presbyterian
church.
Wyerman, the father of James S., remained
on the old homestead, where he passed nearly all his life,
and which is now occupied by his son, James S. He had
born to him six children, of whom but two survive--Margaret
Jane and James S. He was a republican in politics, and
honored by his fellow citizens by election to various
offices of trust in his township; he died at the early
age of forty-five years, a member of the Reformed church,
in which he had filled all the offices. His widow, now
about seventy-five years of age, is still in good health,
and resides with her, son, James S., who is affectionately
caring for her in her declining days. The paternal great-grandparents
of James S. Fry were natives of Germany.
James S. has passed all his life on the farm
on which he was born, with the exception of four months
spent at school in Deerfield, for which he had been prepared
by an attendance at the district school in his native
township.