Source: History of Boone County, Indiana, by Hon. L.M. Crist, 1914.
I. N. ARMSTRONG I. N. Armstrong, for many years a well-known
farmer and a
practical blacksmith of Sugar Creek township, Boone county, Indiana,
was born in the
state of Ohio in the year 1824. His father, Christopher Armstrong,
died in 1834, having
lost his wife some years previously, our subject thus becoming
an orphan at the early age
of ten years. The parents were church members, and carefully reared
their three children
to a life of morality as long as they were spared to them, and
instilled such lessons of
usefulness and industry as made their offspring the valued members
of society they
afterward became. The family settled early in Franklin county,
Indiana, and in Metamora,
that county, I. N. Armstrong served an apprenticeship of four
years at blacksmithing,
becoming an adept at the trade. From Metamora he moved to New
Trenton, in the same
county, where, for twelve years, he followed his trade with much
pecuniary profit. While
a resident of New Trenton he married, in 1844, Miss Mary Sparks,
a native of Franklin
county, born in 1825. This marriage was blessed with four children,
namely: Charles A.,
who died an infant; George, also deceased; Frank, now a hardware
merchant at
Thorntown and Willie, a babe that died when five weeks old. Relinquishing
his trade in
New Trenton for the pursuit of agriculture, Mr. Armstrong traded
off his establishment
for a farm of 160 acres in the vicinity and cultivated it for
ten years, and then came to
Boone county, in 1866, and bought a farm of 160 acres, which he
partially improved, but
in a short time moved to Colfax, Clinton county, Indiana, and
followed his trade for eight
years; he then returned to his farm in Boone county, on which
he resided two years. He
again became tired of farm life and moved back to Colfax where,
in partnership with his
son, Frank, he went into the hardware business. Four years later,
he returned to his farm
in Boone county. Mr. Armstrong's death occurred in Thorntown on
June 10, 1909, and
Mrs. Armstrong passed away a few years later, her death occurring
August 5, 1913.
Religiously, Mr. Armstrong affiliated with the Presbyterian church
and politically was a
Democrat.
ARMSTRONG SPARKS
Submitted by Amy K Davis