Reuben M. Scott

M, b. 10 February 1826, d. 5 July 1890
FatherThomas Scott Jr b. 1 May 1788, d. 6 Apr 1881
MotherMary Bullis b. c 1794, d. 28 Mar 1867
Relationship1st cousin 4 times removed of Pamela Joyce Wood
Last Edited27 Aug 2018
Reuben M. Scott
     Reuben M. Scott was born on 10 February 1826 at Noyan, Missisquoi Co, Quebec.1 He was the son of Thomas Scott Jr and Mary Bullis. Reuben M. Scott was baptized on 17 August 1834 at St George's Anglican Church, Clarenceville, Missisquoi Co, Quebec.1 He married Elizabeth A. Hanks, daughter of Philander Hanks and Martha Ferris, in 1861 at Vermont.2 Reuben M. Scott died on 5 July 1890 at Menasha, Winnebago Co, Wisconsin, at age 64;
His obituary was quite eloquent:
"Last Saturday evening as the shadows of might were closing in on the natural world, another of Menasha's pioneer residents sank into that last final sleep which knows no waking this side of eternity. After a long struggle against mortality, the iron constitution of Reuben M. Scott finally yielded to the encroachments of death, and a long and active life was at an end.
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     The obituary was about two full columns long, mentioning that for the past two years he suffered from " a gradual softening of the brain, which so dulled his powers of perception and impaired his memory as to render him oblivious of nearly everything". Sound very much like Alzheimer's.3,4
     "The Commemorative Biographical Record of the Fox River Valley" begins its sketch on Reuben Scott with: "among the representative men of Winnebago county, none perhaps ever exercised more influence on the people, or more impressed them with his own merits than [this] gentleman.." The sketch tells how he attended the winter schools back home at Clarenceville and assisted his father on the farm during the summers. When he was 18 he found work on farms in New York and Vermont before going to Wisconsin in 1848. ("The History of Winnebago County" by Harney, p. 229 says he migrated from Vermont to Menasha in the fall of 1852). He settled on wild land in an area that was to become Menasha, clearing and working the land and building his home, "all with his own hands, toil and skill". He ventured largely into real estate for a time until 1860 when he and a partner, Mr. Fisher, purchased the Star Flouring Mill in Menasha. In 1869 he built the National Hotel which at that time was considered the grandest building in the city. In 1867 he built "one of the finest residences in the city...which for elegance and commodiousness is unsurpassed". R.M. Scott invested heavily in city property, farm land, manufacturing companies, and employed many men for lumbering. Among his many other contributions is that he built, on contract, the first 64 miles of the Wisconsin Central railroad in 121 days, a feat never before accomplished in the state. He was "noted far and wide for his executive ability and administrative powers...was a.. self-made man, one who, unaided save by his own willing hands, indomitable perseverance and sound judgement, scaled the ladder of success".5 He appeared on the census of 1880 at Menasha, Winnebago Co, Wisconsin; Reuben M. Scott, 51, born Canada, and wife Libbie A., 45, born VT were living in Menasha.6

Family

Elizabeth A. Hanks b. May 1836, d. 14 Oct 1916

Citations

  1. [S111] Caldwells' & Christie's Manor Ang 1832-1851;, M-128.43, Baptism of Reuben Scott, 1834.
  2. [S55] Comm Bio Record of Fox Valley, p. 1056.
  3. [S222] Newspaper, , Unknown name, - Press, Sat., 12 Jul 1899, Menasha, Wisconsin. Reuben M. Scott, Page 1.
  4. [S1079] Ancestry.com Inc., 2000: Wisconsin Births, 1820-1907 , Winnebago Co, Vol. 03, Page#: 138, Reel, 141; Image 210; Death of Reuben Scott, 1890.
  5. [S530] J.H. Beers, Record of Fox River Valley, p. 10566.
  6. [S105] 1880 US Census, Menasha, Winnebago, Wisconsin. FHL Film 1255452; NA Film T9-1452; Page 55B.