Rev. W. H. Gallant
Rev. W. H. Gallant, who for the past 35 years has been a minister in the Baptist Church, scarcely needs an introduction to the people of Allen County, for his religious work has covered so large a territory and has been productive of such wide-spread interest that there are few localities in which he is not well known. His birth took place in Hancock County, Ohio, May 28, 1841, and he is the only son of William and Emily (Moore) Gallant.
Mr. Gallant comes of Irish and English ancestry. His paternal grandmother was a cousin to that great statesman, Henry Clay. The father of our esteemed subject was born in January, 1811, and died from an accident in 1866. The mother was born in March, 1817, and died at Spencerville, at the home of her son, at the age of 83 years and 10 months, passing away just two hours later than England's venerable queen, in 1902. Mr. Gallant's parents were aged respectively 23 and 17 years when they were united in marriage in Delaware County, Ohio. They came from large families, both having brothers and sisters numbering 11, but their children were eight in all, the survivors being: Amelia, widow of Joshua Stokesberry, now aged 69 years, who resides with her children; Martha, widow of Alfred Gorby, a farmer; and W. H., of Spencerville. The parents rest in Hassan Cemetery, eight miles northeast of Ada, Ohio.
W. H. Gallant was the only son of his parents' family and was born in the woods in Hancock County. He was reared on the pioneer farm and, off an on, attended the district schools until he was 17 years old, enjoying also some advantages at Findlay. He then began to teach school and for 14 years followed this progression at various times, teaching in all 28 school terms. His conversion dates from his 19th year, in March, 1859, and he was baptized on the 8th of the following June in the Old School Baptist Church. Before going into the details of his years of ministerial work, mention must be here made of his services as a soldier, these of themselves being of an important enough character to entitle him to the deep regard of his fellow-citizens.
From the opening of the Civil War his sympathies were enlisted, but he did not actually enter the service until 1862, when he became a member of Company D, 99th Reg., Ohio Vol. Inf., from which he was honorably discharged in March 1863. The continuance of the rebellion made more troops necessary and in 1864 he again entered the service, enlisting in Company F, 122nd Reg., Ohio Vol. Inf, under General Wright. On March 25, 1865, before Petersburg, he was terribly wounded, receiving three shots, the one of his left leg necessitating the amputation of the limb just below his knee. In spite of the disadvantages to which this accident has subjected him, he has never permitted it to interfere with his pastoral work and he has never on that account shirked any hard duty of his calling. He has ridden miles and miles over a rough country, through cold and storm to keep an appointment, to preach the Gospel, to perform a marriage service of to say comforting works above the grave.
After his return from the army and recuperation from his accident and injury, he took up active work in the church, a burden he has never laid down. He remained in the Old School Baptist Church and then assisted in organizing the Riley Creek Baptist Church and was its first clerk. He began preaching in 1869 and in December, 1870, he was ordained in the Riley Creek Baptist Church, only three days after its dedication. This was his first pastorate. He recalls his work in that church with feelings of the greatest satisfaction, it being on the ground where he used to play ball in his boyhood. He has served four pastorates in this church, aggregating 11 years and, when far away has traveled a distance of 60 miles to attend some special service here, like the burial of an old pioneer, a member of one of his early congregations.
Mr. Gallant has been pastor of 17 churches of the Auglaize Baptist Association, of which he is now moderator, and each pastorate included adjacent missions, as follows: Riley Creek, with four; Marion, four; Mercer, four; Pleasant Grove, four; Waynesfield, three; Spencerville, four; Amanda, two; Willshire, two; and one each at Neptune, McDonald, Haviland, Kenton, Providence, Blanchard Valley, Pleasant Mills (Indiana), where he remained one year; Harrison, Pleasant View and South Lima. He built churches at Riley Creek, Marion, Spencerville, Willshire, Haviland and South Lima, assisted in having repairs made on the church at Waynesfield to the amount of $604, and cleared a debt of $872 at Mercer and one of $700 at Pleasant Grove. He has been uniformly successful in evangelistic work and at one meeting, in 1885, 47 converts were made. He has extended the hand of fellowship to 100 converts in the Amanda, Riley Creek and Waynesfield churches.
In 1879 Mr. Gallant organized the Baptist Church at Spencerville. There were but four constituent members, viz: George H. Kephart and wife, Ella Kephart, Susanna Sutton and Mrs. Fisher. Through the efforts of Mr. Gallant, by 1881, a regular church replaced the mission and by the close of the fourth year the little faithful body numbered 55. Only one of the original constituent members, Mrs. Susanna Sutton, is now living. The present church edifice was erected at a cost of $3,000, while its furnishings are also valuable and in accordance with present demands.
Mr. Gallant has been twice married. On November 1, 1860, he was married in Hancock County, Ohio, to Lucinda Watt, who died in April, 1903, at St. Marys, Ohio, having been an invalid for a number of years. During the whole period of illness she was tenderly cared for by her husband whose ministrations eased her months of helplessness. She was the mother of three children, viz: Effie, Charles William and Willard L. The daughter was a popular teacher in the public schools prior to her marriage to Adolphus Bice; they have four children Clyde; Hubert, a graduate of the Spencerville schools, a teacher at the age of 16 years and now a student at Oxford; Nellie and Lucy. Charles William, the eldest son of Mr. Gallant, suffered for 12 years with heart trouble and died at the age of 19 years and 10 months. At the age of 18 he was baptized by his father at the Pleasant View Baptist Church, near the Indiana line. Willard L., the second son, married Alice Balyeat and they have a son, Jewell.
Mr. Gallent married, second, Mrs. Sarah Frances Kershner, who was born in Shelby County, Ohio, and is a daughter of William Ginn. Her father was born in Ireland and came as an early settler to Shelby County, Ohio. He died at Dayton, the father of 14 children. He married three times, his second wife being Miriam Botkin, who bore five children, viz: Mary, John, James, Johnson and Sarah Frances, the last named born in 1849. On March 5, 1866, Sarah Frances Ginn married Francis Marion Kershner. He was born in Geene County, Ohio, near Xenia, in January, 1841, and died in October, 1896. They had three children, as follows: William Erie, Lura M and Anna. William Erie was superintendent of schools for 16 years, during which he served these places: Mendon, Mercer County; Prairie Depot, Wood County, and Columbus Grove. He resigned from the last named position to accept one with Lippincott & Company, of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, as a traveling salesman, his line being school supplies. He married Mamie Barrington and they have one daughter, Helen Barrington. The eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kershner is Mrs. Otto Botkin; she has one daughter, Lillian Frances. The youngest daughter is Mrs. Reno Moore; she has two children Marion Seymour and Naomi Ginn. On October 28, 1903, Mrs. Kershner was united to Rev. W. H. Gallant. She united first with the United Brethren Church in 1874 and with the Bapist Church in 1888.
Mr. Gallant can look back over many fruitful years. While he no longer feels called upon to risk his life and health in the long journeyings which formerly were his daily task, on occasion he will go far to attend some particular church function, especially it in so doing he can recall memories and acquaintances of the early days of his ministerial life, for which he cherishes the tenderness recollections. In 1905 he made such a journey. Out of the 28 candidates to be ordained in his old church was a young man, one of his own converts George Lewis. Mr. Gallant wished to be present at the ordination of this young man, who had been chosen as a missionary to China, and it was a great pleasure for him to be chosen to offer the ordination prayer on this occasion in the very church where he, himself, had been ordained in 1870.