A website for the descendants of J. W. Wells of Menominee, Michigan
J. W. Wells remembered
Two documents lay out J.W.'s ancestry, early life, business dealings, civic life,
and offspring.
Obituary from the Menominee newspaper
(Written in the flowery language of the era, the obituary below was published in the Menominee Herald Leader on August 17, 1921. It has some interesting pre-J.W. family history, too. The handwritten inscription at top is from Ralph Wells to his son Tom, who sent me this photocopied document in 2001. The obituary writer obviously had Sawyer's history book in hand when he wrote this, since he borrowed from Sawyer quite unabashedly! -- BW)

Profile from a history book:
"Mr. Wells is one of the substantial capitalists of the Upper Peninsula..."
(Source: A history of the northern peninsula of Michigan and its people;
1911, by Alvah L. Sawyer. Thank you to Bruce Gerber for sending it
for inclusion in this website. -- BW)
John W. Wells
The statement of Macaulay that "A people that take no pride in noble
achievements of remote ancestors will never achieve anything worthy to be
remembered with pride by remote generations" has emphatic verification
in each age and generation and he is indeed fortunate who can revert to ancestry
whose record bears indication of worthy lives and worthy deeds. This is especially
true in the case of John W. Wells, who is a scion of the family whose name
has been identified with the annals of American history since the early part
of the seventeenth century.
In New England, that cradle of so much of our history, the family name has
long been one of distinctive prominence and from that section have gone forth
sterling representatives to aid in the development and upbuilding of many
other parts of the Union.
He whose name initiates this review came to Menominee, Michigan, as a young
man and he has been most prominently identified with the great lumber industry
of Wisconsin and northern Michigan, while as a citizen he has exemplified
the utmost loyalty and public spirit, contributing generously to the support
of those measures and enterprises that have conserved the progress and substantial
upbuilding of this favored section of the Wolverine state. He is one of the
essentially representative business men and most honored citizens of Menominee,
where he has long maintained his home and where his interests are large and
important.
[Interesting pre-JW family history...]
John W. Wells was born near the city of Davenport, Iowa, on the
30th of March, 1841, and as this date indicates he is a member of one
of the early pioneer families of the Hawkeye commonwealth. As already
stated, the Wells family, which is of stanch English origin (the town
of Wells, England, being founded by the Wells Family), was founded
in America in the Colonial epoch, the original progenitors in the new
world having come hither as early as 1635. Members of this family were
numbered among the first settlers of the state of Maine, and the town
of Wells, York County, that state, was named in its honor. Captain
Richard Wells, grandfather of the subject of this sketch, followed
a seafaring life for many years and was captain and owner of a merchant
vessel. He was born in Maine and passed his entire life in that state.
His son Alexander, father of John W. Wells, was born in the old Pine
Tree state, in the year 1818, and there he was reared to maturity.
He was accorded excellent educational advantages and was educated at
Bowdoin College. In 1837 he came to the west and settled in Scott county,
Iowa, then a territory, where he took up a farm. He was one of the
sterling pioneers of that section and he continued his residence in
Iowa until the Civil war, his marriage having been solemnized after
he had there established a home. When the integrity of the Union was
thrown into jeopardy through armed rebellion, he tendered his services
in its defense by enlisting in a regiment of Iowa volunteer' infantry
and attained the rank of lieutenant. He practically sacrificed his
life in the cause of his country, as he died from the effect of disease
contracted while in the service, having passed away at St. Louis, in
the year 1863. His wife, whose maiden name was Julia A. Carter, was
born in Indiana in the year 1820 and her death occurred at Menominee
in 1900. Her father and mother were natives of Virginia and representatives
of old and prominent families of the historic Old Dominion. He served
with distinction as a soldier in the Mexican war, in which he held
the rank of captain. He was numbered among the very early settlers
of Iowa and was a member of its legislature in the territorial days.
Alexander Wells and his wife were both devoted members of the Methodist
Episcopal Church, and the former's political allegiance was given to
the Republican Party from the time of its organization until his death,
only a few years later.
He and his wife became the parents of seven children, of whom the following
are now living: Mary is the widow of William Hollenbeck, who served four
years in the Civil war as a member of the Twentieth Iowa; Alfred C., who
served during the Civil war, in which he was a non-commissioned officer of
the Second Iowa Cavalry, is now a resident of Iowa; John W. is the immediate
subject of this sketch; Sarah A. is the wife of William Lamphere of Rapid
City, South Dakota; James L. maintains his home in Evanston, Illinois. The
father served for many years as a justice of the peace and as postmaster.
He was a man of distinctive prominence and influence in his community and
his name has an enduring place on the roster of the honored families of the
fine Hawkeye commonwealth.
[J.W.'s early years...]
John W. Wells was reared to the sturdy discipline of the old homestead
farm in Iowa and his early educational training was that afforded by
the public schools of that locality. Later he completed a course in
the business college at Davenport, Iowa. He continued to be associated
in the work and management of the home farm until he was twenty years
of age, after which he passed one year in Wisconsin. About the time
he attained to his legal majority he came to Menominee, Michigan, where
he was employed for two years as a bookkeeper. He next became interested
as a partner in a lumber business with headquarters at Oconto, Wisconsin,
where he maintained his home until 1875, when he removed his plant
and business to Menominee, which city has since represented his home
and to the up building of which he has contributed in a large measure.
[J.W.'s big-business years...]
Here he has continuously been engaged in the lumber business and
in the long intervening years his operations have been of extensive
order. He is vice-president of the Girard Lumber Company and is general
manager of its business. The company has a well equipped saw mill at
Dunbar, Wisconsin. Mr. Wells is also one of the principal owners of
the Bird-Wells Lumber Company of Wausaukee, Wisconsin, the mill of
which corporation turns out about twenty million feet of lumber annually.
Of this Company he is President.
Mr. Wells organized the J. W. Wells Lumber Company of Menominee, of
which he is president. He is also President of the Northern Hardware and
Supply Company, wholesalers of lumbermen's and miners' supplies and general
hardware. He is also President of the White Pine Lumber Company, a family
corporation consisting of himself and his three sons, Daniel, Artemus and
Ralph. This company operates in Ontario, Canada, where they own two townships
of pine timber, a logging railroad, a large saw mill and everything necessary
to carry on an extensive business. Mr. Wells is also President of the Wisconsin
and Northern Railway, and Vice President of the Dunbar & Wausaukee Railway,
which roads supply the Dunbar & Wausaukee mills with logs and also do
a regular railroad business in connection with the Chicago, Milwaukee & St.
Paul Railway, the Soo Line and the Wisconsin and Michigan Railway. In 1898
Mr. Wells bought an interest in the I. Stephenson Company at Wells, Michigan.
He re-organized the company, re-built the old mill, built a large modern
hardwood saw mill and hardwood flooring factory, negotiated the purchase
of the Ford River Lumber Company consisting of a large saw mill, the village
of Ford River, one hundred and ten thousand acres of land and logging equipment,
etc. To supply Ford River and I. Stephenson Company mills with about eighty-five
million feet of logs per year, he built the Escanaba and Lake Superior Railway,
consisting of about one hundred and forty miles of track with first class
rolling stock and equipment.
He has recently sold his interest in the Ford River, I. Stephenson
and Escanaba & Lake
Superior Railway Companies at a handsome profit and will confine himself
closer to personal operations. He is at present building a very large hardwood
flooring and manufacturing plant and saw mill at Menominee to more closely
utilize the lumber from his Wausaukee, Dunbar and Canadian mills.
Mr. Wells believes in employing his sons in the active operations of his
enterprises and they all own substantial interest and fill responsible positions
in the business.
[Non-business activities...]
Mr. Wells is one of the substantial capitalists of the Upper Peninsula,
and his entire course as a business man and citizen has been guided
and governed by the highest principles of integrity and honor so that
he has ever been the recipient of the fullest measure of popular confidence
and esteem. In politics Mr. Wells gives unqualified allegiance to the
Republican Party and he has rendered efficient co-operation in the
promotion of its interests in a local way. He served for two terms
as a member of the board of supervisors of Menominee county, was for
two terms a member of the city council and for three terms also he
had the distinction of holding the office of mayor of Menominee, having
first been elected on the first of April, 1893, and having been chosen
as his own successor in the election of 1895-6. His administration
is on record as one of the best ever given to the municipal government
of Menominee. In the Masonic fraternity Mr. Wells is affiliated with
Menominee Lodge, Free and Accepted Masons, Menominee Chapter, Royal
Arch Masons, Menominee Commandery, Knights Templars and Ancient Arabic
Order of the Nobles of the Mystic Shrine, in the city of Marquette,
Michigan.
[Marriage and children...]
In December 1873 was solemnized the marriage of Mr. Wells to Miss
Isabella Crawford, who was born in the Province of New Brunswick, Canada
and who is a daughter of the late Daniel Crawford, a native of Scotland.
Mrs. Wells died July 23, 1910, after an illness of several years. Mrs.
Wells had long been a prominent and loved figure in the social life
of Menominee and she was a devout member of the Presbyterian church
of this city. Mr. and Mrs. Wells have had six children, namely: Florence
A. Law, a resident of Menominee; Daniel, formerly First Lieutenant,
Thirtieth U. S. Volunteers and a veteran of the Spanish war who resides
in Detroit; Artemus C., who resides in Menominee; Edna B. Walsh, who
resides in Houghton, Michigan; Alfred T., who was drowned in August,
1900, and Ralph W., who is superintendent of White Pine Lumber Co.,
operating at Blind River, Canada.