Early Life and Times of Boone County, Indiana, published May 1877, republished 1974
JAMES P. DALE It is interesting to notice, in the struggles which have
convulsed the
country and tried our institutions, whether national or local, how so many
of the men who
have been laborers in these great scenes did not come upon the arena filtered
through
generations of scholars and statesmen, but came unheralded, save with the
advantages
which a democratic republic offers to every citizen. The majority of the
foremost men of
the country in every calling are the legitimate sons of democracy. That
hard, Spartan
mother trained them early to her fatigues and wrestlings and watchings,
and gave them
their shields on entering the battle of life with only the Spartan mothers
brief: "With this,
or upon this." Native force raised James B. Dale to the position of
the leader of the
Anti-Monopoly party in Boone County. And the working of the same generous
laws, that
permits each toiler to carve a destiny for himself, saw him write his name
upon the minds
and hearts of the people throughout the county. The early years of Mr.
Dale present a fair
average of the advantages and struggles incident to the Hoosier youth.
His father,
Matthew Dale, was a son of Squire Dale, who was born in western Tennessee
in the year
1792. He was married to Elizabeth Smith about the year 1810. He was in
the war of
1812. A short time after his marriage he emigrated to Lawrence County,
Indiana. He
stayed there a few years, and from that county he moved to Putnam County,
and in 1828
he moved from Putnam County to Jackson Township, Boone County. He entered
a tract
of land on a stream called Eel River, upon which he lived the rest of his
days. He died in
March, 1848. His wife died in August, 1877, being eighty-three years of
age.
To them were born eight children, three boys and five girls. Matthew,
the second son, was
born on the 4th day of May, 1820. He was married to Miss Frances A. Reese,
a daughter
of Samuel Reese, a highly esteemed farmer of Washington Township, on January
1, 1843.
They raised ten children, seven boys and three daughters. His wife died
in March, 1864.
He married the widow of Reuben Scott in January, 1867. To them were born
two
children, one boy and one girl. He died in November 1874. James B. Dale,
the fifth child
by the first marriage, was born December 18, 1850. He received the training
usually
accorded to farmer boys. He worked on the farm, after arriving at the proper
age, in the
summer season and attended this district school in the winter. About the
time he reached
his sixteenth year he entered the academy at Ladoga, Indiana, while the
institution was
conducted by Prof. Milton B. Hopkins. While he was there he boarded with
the professor,
who took quite an interest in him. Mr. Hopkins urged him to complete the
course of study
and remarked to him that his native ability as such that he might become
a profound
scholar and one of the foremost men of the state. But when Mr. Hopkins
left Ladoga and
went to Kokomo, Indiana, James B. quit the school and never entered it again.
At the age of eighteen he began teaching in the public schools of the
county. He taught
about ten winters in succession, and working the meantime through the summer
seasons on
the farm. He was six feet high, and weighted 185 pounds. He was never
sick any until
the time of his death. On the 1st day of January, 1874, he was married,
as most teacher
are to one of his pupils, Miss Maggie Jackson, daughter of Elisha Jackson,
a prominent
citizen of the county. This union proved a very agreeable one. To them
were born six
children, three boys and three girls. The oldest, a girl, died in infancy.
The rest still live
with their widowed mother on the farm. Young Dale was rocked in a Democratic
cradle,
and his complexion was Democratic until after he reached his majority.
But, to use his
own words, he says, "That the first Democratic medicine I ever took
was the Greeley pill,
and that did not digest very well, so I wouldnt take any more."
He was twenty-three
years old when the financial panic of 1873 occurred, and seeing how distressed
the masses
of the people were in consequence of this stagnation of business throughout
the entire
country, he set to work to understand the nature and causes of panics and
how they might
be prevented. From that time on as long as he lived he was tireless student
of political
economy. In consequence of his studies he saw fit to change his political
views, and
therefore identified himself with the anti-monopoly party, of which he soon
became the
leader in the county.
In the summer of 1876 he canvassed the county for the office of County
Clerk. During
this campaign he made several speeches in each township in the county, this
being his first
effort in making public speeches. His party not being very strong, he was
defeated. Again
his party nominated him for office in 1882, this time for Representative.
It was not from
choice on his part that he made this race, there being no chance of an election.
But the
workers of his party conceded that he was their leader and therefore put
him forward as
their champion.
He was free from moral cowardice, and so convinced that the measures
he advocated were
right, and must therefore eventually triumph, that, like the Norseman, he
was determined
to find a way or to make it.
Mr. Dale was in an unequal battle from the first. With both the Republican
and
Democratic parties marshaled against him, he threw himself into the campaign.
The
dauntless spirit that had faced odds in the previous campaign never flinched
as he saw the
handwriting on the wall. Determined to do all he could do, his tremendous
energies
created a kindred zeal among his followers, but he was defeated by the votes
of Mr.
Sterratt.
After this campaign was over, Mr. Dale turned his attention to the farm
more closely than
ever before. He thought he would never again take an active part in politics.
But in this
he was mistaken. For, in making two campaigns in the county, he had gained
the
confidence of the people, his abilities were established, and hosts of friends
from all
parties flocked about him, urging him again to canvass the county. So again
in 1884 his
party nominated him unanimously, as it had done in both cases before. He
also received
the nomination of the Democratic party, with considerable opposition.
Of an earnest and impetuous temper for what he deemed right, and wedded
to the
principles which he advocates by all the instincts of his being, his enthusiasm
knew no
bounds. Both parties caught the glow of his zeal, and he was this time
elected by a
handsome majority.
At the close of his campaign he was conceded by all parties to be one
of the best speakers
in the county. He had that power of statement which made him characteristic
as a speaker.
He possessed decision of character, self-reliance, and an inflexible will.
And with these
qualities standing out prominent as a basis for his qualifications to the
office to which he
had been elected, he goes to the state legislature.
While acting in that body, he was placed on several important committees.
And every
public measure on which he was called to act, received his careful attention;
he weighed it
in all its general bearings and then mastered it in detail. The thoroughness
of his
knowledge was his first source of power as a speaker. After this session
adjourned he
returned to the farm; but by this time he began to comprehend that his native
health was to
be in the service of the people.
His friends were expecting to send him back to the legislature in 1886,
but this was not to
be; death stepped in and interfered.
In the winter of 1885-6 he again taught school, but ten day before his
school should have
closed, he took a severe attack of lung fever, and died on the 15th day
of March, 1886.
Thus passed off the stage of action one of Boone Countys favorite
sons.
Mr. Dale was a member of the Newlight or Christian Church since February,
1881,
continuing an active and useful member until death. He was buried at the
old Union
Cemetery in Jackson Township, near where he loved and where he was loved.
See his
portrait in another part of this book.
DALE SMITH REESE SCOTT HOPKINS JACKSON