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City of Neillsville Historic Preservation Commission
City of Neillsville WI                                          2025 - City of Neillsville Historic Preservation Commission.   106 W Division St                                                             All rights reserved.  Neillsville WI  54456  715-743-2105                                                                                                                   Updated 04/20/2025
Judge James O’Neill (1847 - 1929) Born September 3, 1847 - Lisbon, St. Lawrence Co. New York Died June 9, 1929 - Neillsville WI Buried City of Neillsville Cemetery
Reminiscences by Ju dge O’Neill I am asked by the editor to write for his s pecial edition, something of my recoll ections of Neills ville and C lar k C ounty as I remember the conditions existing w hen I came here thirty-seven years ag o. So, here goes . On a rainy day , the 18 th of Septe mber 1873 I came f ro m Hu mbird with my uncl e J ame s O’ Ne ill in the stage. I had met him in Cleveland Ohio at the home of another uncle, for the first time. My unc le James seemed anxious that I s hould come to live with him and practice law here. When we reached the top of the hill this side of David W ood’ s my uncle said: “There James is Neillsville.” And there it was a little village of, say 600 people. When we reached town, my uncle took me to his home, the same residence now owned by H.J. Brooks. I wa s shown and told that the front room was to be mine. My uncle had lost his wife in the spring of the same year and a Mr . and Mrs. Donovan kept the house. We went to board with my cousin Belle Covill who was the wife of W ilson S. Covill and liv ed in a ho use w hich sto od wh ere the res idence of Decator Dickins on no w is . My uncle found me an of fice in a room in the old court house, which is the building now occupied by Geor ge Hart for an express of fice. It stood where the present court house is located. I had a clie nt in a few days, and then a noth er an d another so I have been here, (is it pos sible?) thirty-seven years . Neillsville was a little villa ge, beauti f ully located amo ng these hills. It was a busy place for it was a base of operations for lumbermen. In those days from one to two hundred millions of logs floated down Black River every year . One the great centers of activity was the “Oasis”, a saloon kept by Alex Cross on the corner where Kappell and building now s tands. H ans Johnson and Henry Meyer kept the O’Neill House. Hotel business was booming in those days. D aniel Gates and Joe Head kept a meat market where the Neillsville Bank is located. Dr . W. C. Crandell kept a drug store about where W effer’ s is now . The only brick building in town was the store of Hewett and W ood, the now the dry goods store of W .J. Marsh. There was only one church, the Methodist, the same now owned by W. R. C. Everybody supported the church and was a center of religious interest. W ouldn’ t it seem good again to have only one church in a town this size! There never was but one religion. There never will be but one. There is only one God in this universe and a common destiny for all mankind. W ell the years have passed and our town has now nine churches. Who can tell may be in this city a hundred years hence? There may be a coming together and once again, a sin gle churc h.
CREDIT - Biographical information Clark County WI History Website https://www.wiclarkcountyhistory.org/
----Source: NEILLSVILLE PRESS (Neillsville, Clark County, Wis.) 06/13/1929
O'Neill, James (3 SEP 1847 - 10 JUN 1929)
On Monday morning, June 10, 1929 at 6:20 o'clock, the long, useful and interesting life of Judge James O'Neill closed on earth. About two years ago his friends began to notice a slight decline in his physical strength, as it seemed difficult for him to take the active exercise of former days. He complained of shortness of breath when walking up hill to his home. As time went on the difficulty gradually increased, and during the past fall and winter he rarely came down to his office. His general health, however, seemed unimpaired, all organs of his body except his heart, seeming to function perfectly, the weakness of the heart action apparently causing the shortness of breath. With the coming of spring he got out of doors again, and only a little over two weeks before his death, he was down on the street visiting with friends. It was evident, however, to those who watched him closely, that he was slowly failing. On Sunday, two weeks before his death, he was taken out for a ride and on his return seemed quite exhausted; from then on to the close, he remained most of the time in bed. He continued conscious and clear of mind until Sunday, and even to the last seemed to recognize members of his family at the bedside.
James O'Neill was born in Lisbon, St. Lawrence Co., N.Y., Sept. 3, 1847, making him 81 years, 9 months and 7 days old at his death. He was the son of Andrew and Mary (Holiston) O'Neill. His grandparents on his father's side were the first settlers in the Lisbon township and the old farm where he first settled is still owned by his descendants. On this farm Judge O'Neill lived as a boy and attended the district school. At the age of 15 he began to teach school, later entering Lawrence University at Canton, N. Y., where he attended for three years; then he taught school again. In 1868, before he was 21, he won a scholarship in a competitive examination, to enter the newly organized Cornell University, and entered that institution as a sophomore. Here he distinguished himself as a scholar and debater. He left college in the fall of 1870 to become principal of Ogdensburg High School, meanwhile continuing his studies by himself, so that he graduated with his original class at Cornell in the summer of 1871. He was a charter member of the Delta Upsilon Fraternity at Cornell, and all his future life maintained a great interest in this fraternity. At the university he enjoyed the privilege of instruction under men of the faculty, who were then famous, among them the president, Andrew D. White, James Russell Lowell, Louis Agassiz, Bayard Taylor, George William Curtiss and others. In his graduating class were a number of men who later became prominent in public life, four of them becoming members of the Supreme Court in New York. The atmosphere of his home community seemed favorable to the development of scholars and statesmen, out of St. Lawrence County coming at that time such men as Secretary of State Kellogg; Ex-Mayor Eustis, the famous philanthropist of Minneapolis; Irving Bacheller, the noted author, and many others. Contact with the men he met at college and in the home community developed the talents and ambitions of James O'Neill. After graduating from Cornell he entered the office of James McNaughton, a famous lawyer at Ogdensburg, and studied for some time. He then entered Albany Law School, receiving his degree in Law in 1873. His uncle, James O'Neill Sr., who was founder of Neillsville, Clark County, Wis., was then a prominent man of affairs here and he invited his nephew and namesake to come west and visit him.
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In June 6, 1876 he was married to Miss Marian Robinson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David Robinson, pioneers of Weston Rapids, an early village north of Neillsville. To them were born two children, Ernest Andrew, who died Oct. 5, 1905, a young man of 28; and Marian, Mrs. F. D. Calway of Neillsville. Besides his wife and daughter, Judge O'Neill leaves one sister, Mrs. George W. Sparrowhawk on the old home farm in St. Lawrence Co., N.Y. and one brother, William H. O'Neill, in the village of Lisbon, N.Y.
Funeral services will be held at the F. D. Calway home Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock, Rev. G. W. Longenecker, pastor of the Congregational Church, officiating.
Section 1899 # 65