Henry Smith Shively
Henry Smith Shively, general farmer and respected and representative citizen, who owns 161 acres of well improved land in Wells Township, Jefferson County, Ohio, was born in Belmont County, Ohio, February 13, 1839, and is a son of Richard and Jane (Smith) Shively.
Richard Shively was also born in Belmont County and was left fatherless in childhood. He remained in Belmont County until manhood and worked there as a mechanic, but after coming to Jefferson County he bought a farm in Warren Township and resided there and engaged in agricultural pursuits during the remainder of his life. He married Jane Smith, who was born in West Virginia. They died on Warren Ridge, Warren Township, aged eighty and eighty-two years, respectively. They had five children, namely: Sarah Ann, now deceased, who was the wife of George Neel, also deceased; and Henry S., John B., George and Forgus Richard.
Henry S. Shively was quite young when his parents came to Jefferson County and he grew to manhood on the home farm in Warren Township, obtaining his ediication in the old log schoolhouse near his home. In 1863, after his marriage, he operated a portable saw-mill and was so engaged until 1874, when he bought his present farm, later suffering the loss of his buildings by fire. He erected the present substantial structures and has made other valuable improvements. This property formerly belonged to Smallwood & Winning.
In January, 1863, Mr. Shively was married to Miss Emily E. Scamehorn, who died in 1905, aged sixty-one years. She was a daughter of Henry Scamehorn, an old resident of Jefferson County. To Mr. and Mrs. Shively ten children were born, as follows: Charles, who married Sarah Williams, and has a large family; John D. and Sarah Jane, twins, the former of whom died, leaving a widow, formerly Maggie Todd, Sarah Jane being the wife of Kenneth Blake, who operates Mr. Shively 's farm, and mother of four children—Margaret May, Henry E., Lina Bell, and Kenneth A.; Elmer E., who married Margaret Brendley; William, who married Louella Wells, who, at death, left two children—Henry T. and William W.; Anna Bell, deceased, who was the wife of William Barnes; Ida, who married Robert Carpenter and has four children—Earl, Emma, Delia and Carl; Alice; and Margaret and Harley, twins, the latter of whom married Lillian Bell and has three children—Mildred, Harry and Mary Margaret. Mr. Shively has reason to be proud of this large family of descendants, showing as they do evidence of a vigorous stock and they also display in business and at school, down to the youngest, the qualities which promise future usefulness. In his political views Mr. Shively is a Republican.
20th Century History of Steubenville and Jefferson County, Ohio, by Joseph B. Doyle. Richmond-Arnold Publishing Co., Chicago, 1910