Macoupin County
ILGenWeb

Biography - MARY A. PETTENGILL

Mrs. Mary Ann Pettengill, of Bunker Hill, Macoupin County, is the widow of the late David E. Pettengill, whose portrait accompanies this sketch, who was a prosperous farmer and business man, as well as a worthy and highly esteemed citizen. She is a daughter of George W. and Mary Ann (Workinger) Boosinger, and was born near Akron, in Portage County, Ohio, July 3, 1823.

George W. Boosinger was a native of Virginia, and when 12 years of age moved to Ohio in company with his parents, settling in the Western Reserve, where he had many experiences with the Indians and the wild animals in the dense forests, living the life of a pioneer woodsman. He took an active part in the War of 1812. Politically he was a member of the Whig party, taking an active part in the government of his community. He was also interested in school and church work, and helped to establish a number of schools and churches in the new country. Mr. Boosinger was one of a family of four boys and six girls. John Boosinger, the brother of George W., died in Ohio, at the age of 100 years. He at one time drove a team for his brother George W. to Missouri, making the journey in seven weeks. Mr. Boosinger was married to Mary Ann Workinger, who was also a native of Virginia, and they were blessed with five children, namely: Mrs. Mary Ann Pettengill, the subject of this article; George F., a resident of Gillespie township; Wesley, who died in Madison County, Illinois; Christie Ann (Rice), who died at Gillespie; and Charlotte F. (Peter), who is a widow and resides in Oregon. George W. Boosinger died near Gillespie, Macoupin County, in 1863, at the age of 77 years.

David E. Pettengill was born in Salisbury, New Hampshire, January 19, 1820, and was a son of David Pettengill. The latter, also a native of New Hampshire, followed the occupation of farming there until 1836, when he migrated to Alton, Illinois, where he engaged in the milling business, continuing at that occupation until his death in 1838. His father, the grandfather of David E. Pettengill, was a Revolutionary soldier. David Pettengill was the father of six children by his first marriage, namely: Caroline, Hannah, Sarah, Perces, Charles and David E.

David E. Pettengill removed in company with his parents, when about 15 years of age, to Alton, Illinois, where he remained for three years and then removed to Bunker Hill, Macoupin County, Illinois, where he spent the rest of his life, following agricultural pursuits. Mr. Pettengill was a man of good business judgment and conducted his business affairs by skilled methods, as a result of which he became a large land-owner, owning a well tilled farm in his home township, 320 acres in Iowa, and three-quarters of a section in Kansas. Mr. Pettengill was a public spirited citizen and did much toward the building up of Bunker Hill, where he located in 1839, before it was settled. A great reader himself, he did much toward the establishing of libraries in his city. Politically Mr. Pettengill was a Repubiican, but took only a citizen's interest in any political affairs. In 1845 he was married to Mary Ann Boosinger, and they were blessed with two children, namely: Charles, who was born in 1847, and Anna Maria, who died at the age of seven years. Charles Pettengill, the only son of our subject, was a prominent hardware merchant of Gillespie. He died at that place in 1880, leaving a widow and two children — Mrs. Ella Bower, a resident of Bunker Hill, Macoupin County, and Charles, who is a resident of Memphis, Tennessee. David E. Pettengill, our subject's late husband, died September 8, 1894.

Mrs. Mary Ann Pettengill when 12 years of age removed with her parents from Ohio to Missouri, where the family was established near Lexington, in 1836. There they remained for two and a half years, then removed to Alton, Illinois, and, after a short time, she removed with her parents to Macoupin County, where she has since resided, having lived in her present house since 1845.


Extracted 2018 May 07 by Norma Hass from Biographical Sketches of Leading Citizens of Macoupin County, Illinois, published in 1904, pages 242-245.


Design by Templates in Time
This page was last updated 07/01/2022