Home Surname List Name Index Sources Email Us | Seventh Generation135. Hiram Allen SOULE (<) (~) was born on 20 October 1818 in Danby, Rutland County, VT.42,49 He appeared in the census in 1850 in Dorset, Bennington County, VT.41 His surname was listed as "Sowl" and his occupation was listed as "Laborer." His household consisted of Hiram, his wife, their four children, and his mother-in-law, Hannah Coulson, and his sister-in-law, Nancy Coulson. He appeared in the census in 1860 in Wilton Township, Monroe County, WI.43 Hiram appeared in the census in 1870 in Tomah, Tomah Township, Monroe County, WI.47 His occupation was listed as "Iron Moulder." He appeared in the census in 1880 in Tomah, Tomah Township, Monroe County, WI.48 His occupation was listed as "Justice of the Peace." 50 Newspaper Articles: The following appeared in the Sparta Herald May 28, 1889, Pg 4 col 4. "Brutal Crime. Nowhere in the annals of time has there been developed a more shocking, brutal or revolting crime than that of Hiram A. Sowle, of Tomah, was committed to the county jail for today. The details of the affidavit of the little victim of the old lecherous villain are too terrible, and in language as to preclude their publication. Suffice it to say that upon the sworn statement of a little 13-year-old girl named Gleise, this old wretch stands charged with coaxing her into his filthy den of an office, and there resorting to the same methods that the Chinese hoodlums of Milwaukee practiced. He fed her on candy, gave her money, and brutally ravished her. The story of the child is told in that straitforward, childish way that carries conviction to every one who is acquainted with the parties, and can be corroborated in the main by other witnesses. When the story of the outrage--not the half of which has yet been made public -- was learned upon the street, excitement became intense, and the more the news spread the hotter the people became, and Mayor Quigg quickly saw that it would be an invitation to a hemp necktie party to allow the officers to convey the prisoner by train, and employed a private conveyance and took his across country to Sparta. It is beyond question that if the father had been made aware of the outrage upon the little child, that he would have been able easily, to have had help enough to give the old villain his just deserts without formality or ceremony. The crime seems the more terrible when one stops to think that the prisoner is a man 73 years old, who has been for forty a police justice and justice of the peace, and hold honorable offices in two of the most honorable secret societies of the world, a man endowed with more than ordinary ability. It is to be hoped he may be speedily punished and given the full sentence of the law, which is too lenient for crimes of this character." The same paper, Sparta Herald, Sparta, WI presented a second article on Hiram A Sowle. "An Old Villain. Last Saturday afternoon H. A. Sowle, a justice of the peace and well known citizen of Tomah, was brought up to the county jail, charged with one of the grossest crimes in the catalogue -- that of outrage upon a child of thirteen years. Our correspondent at Tomah treats of the matter, and correctly reflects the feeling which exists there over the abomnable crime. The particular offense on which the warrant was issued seems to have been committed in March last, the victim being a little daughter of John Gleise; but she is not the only one, there being three or four, altogether, and his iniquities extend over a period of two years or more. He was in the regular habit of enticing girls into into his office for this purpose, it is said. He was detected in the act by the occupants of a tailor shop adjoining, who saw and heard the proceedings through the board partition which separated them. Last Saturday morning District Attorney Jones and Justice Chris. Maxwell examined the girl Gleise, following it up with the arrest of Sowle, who waived examination, and was taken in a buggy to Tunnel City, in order to escape the wrath of indignant citizens, who began to hear of the case, and gathered in considerable numbers at the depot. At Tunnel City the officer took the train, with Sowle, and got him safely up here in the jail. There was deep excitement in Tomah when the news became generally known, and if Sowle had been caught he would have been made short work of. Yesterday morning Sowle was taken to La Crosse before Judge Newman, and bail fixed a $5,000, at first, but his counsel, A. E. Bleekman, got it reduced to $2,000. Up to this noon he had not secured his bonds." . Hiram Allen SOULE (<) (~) and Harriet Evangeline COLSON were married on 10 October 1839 in East Dorset, Bennington County, VT.42,51 Harriet Evangeline COLSON, daughter of Warren COLSON and Hannah MORSE, was born about 1820 in Vermont.41 She appeared in the census in 1850 in Dorset, Bennington County, VT.41 She died on 3 June 1854 at the age of 34 in Dorset, Bennington County, VT.42 Hiram Allen SOULE (<) (~) and Harriet Evangeline COLSON had the following children:
Hiram Allen SOULE (<) (~) and Lucy A. HAMMOND were married in March 1855 in Dorset, Bennington County, VT.42 Lucy A. HAMMOND was born on 9 November 1831 in Windsor, Windsor County, VT.42 She appeared in the census in 1860 in Wilton Township, Monroe County, WI.43 She appeared in the census in 1870 in Tomah, Tomah Township, Monroe County, WI.47 Lucy died on 28 November 1881 at the age of 50 in Tomah, Tomah Township, Monroe County, WI.42 Hiram Allen SOULE (<) (~) and Lucy A. HAMMOND had the following children:
Hiram Allen SOULE (<) (~) and Phebe Ann SOULE (<) (~) were married in 1886 in Tomah, Tomah Township, Monroe County, WI.42 Phebe Ann SOULE (<) (~), daughter of Gardner SOULE and Abigail CURTIS, was born on 22 November 1829 in Danby, Rutland County, VT.42 She died on 16 September 1888 at the age of 58.42 Hiram Allen SOULE (<) (~) and Samantha WEBER were married on 9 October 1882 in Mauston, Juneau County, WI.50 Samantha WEBER was born on 9 January 1831 in Ashville, Chautauqua County, NY.50 Samantha was about 18 years old when her father died. She came with the family to Wisconsin and is listed on the 1860 Federal Census for Fairfield township, Sauk county, WI . She is probably living with one of her brothers in 1865 in Albion, Jackson county, WI. This was a state census and only the head of household were listed by name, the remainder of the family were merely listed as to gender. She did not appear again until 9 Oct 1882 when she married Hiram Sowle, Justice of the Peace, Tomah, Monroe county, WI. She would have been about 47 years old when she married. Samantha may have married between 1860 and 1882 but no marriage certificate was found. |