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  CLAN BOYD INTERNATIONAL
                                        Richard G. Boyd

                David Lindsey Boyd (1841 - 1919)
 

David Lindsey Boyd’s family lived in the pamish of Grange of Dundermot, Barony of Kilconway,
County Antrim.  The Boyds were farmers and leased their land from the owners of large estates.

David’s father was James Ellis Boyd, and his mother's name was Jenny.  Based on David’s middle
name, a reasonable guess at her maiden name would be Lindsey.  Further information about the
ancestry of this family is based on a search commissioned through the Ulster Historical Foundation
in 1980-81, and is mostly circumstantial in nature.  It shows that a Boyd family were recorded on
rent rolls in the area in 1812 and 1834.  This information strongly suggests that James’ father was a
William Boyd.  This family assuredly descends from Boyds transplanted into Ulster from Ayrshire
in Scotland during the "plantation" of Scots into northern Ireland in the seventeenth century.

David L. Boyd was born in 1841, the youngest of James and Jenny’s eight children.  They lived in
the townland of Spring Mount when David was young.  Of his life in Ireland we know little except
that he was a school teacher and a Mason.  His parchment Masonic membership “certificate” is still
in the family, along with the violin he brought with him to the U.S.

As a younger son, farming the family land was not an option for David.  In pursuit of gainful
employment, he became a teacher in the National School system, where he taught at the
Drumadoon school from 1857 to 1866.  Samuel S. McLure, later a successful American magazine
publisher, was a student of David Boyd’s in Ireland.  Writing in his autobiography of his early days
attending a National School near his home he recalled that because he was malnourished and tired
easily, he would have crying spells in the afternoon, and writes the following:

"I distinctly remember how kind the teacher, Mr. Boyd, was to me when these crying-fits came on,
and how considerate the other boys were...   Every few years each teacher in the public schools
was required to spend six months in Dublin...   I can remember when our teacher Mr. Boyd went,
and how none of us much cared for the substitute...   When Mr. Boyd explained to us boys that the
war was between the Northern and Southern states of North America and not between North and
South America, that was a great revelation to us...   I have so often wondered in the intervening
years what had become of this good and kindly man that I was very much pleased when Senator
Brackett at the time these memoirs first appeared, wrote me, "I suspect the school teacher whom
you mention in your autobiography is my old time friend David L. Boyd, still living in Mt. Vernon,
Iowa."  I availed myself of the hint and was rewarded by the following communication from the
younger Boyd...."  (a letter from David’s son William W. Boyd follows in the autobiography).

An brief account of David L. Boyd’s life is found in a book entitled "Biographical Record (Linn
County)", published in Iowa ca. 1901.  It reports that he was the youngest of eight children and that
his parents James and Jenny Boyd never left County Antrim.  Here is the balance of that biography:

"During his boyhood our subject attended a model school in his native land, and was later a student
in the training school in Dublin.  On leaving that institution he successfully engaged in teaching in
Ireland for seven years.  But the new world had attractions for him, and he determined to come to
that country where every man was equal in the eyes of the law, and where all had an equal chance
for advancement.  In 1868 he bade good-bye to home and friends and went from Belfast to
Liverpool, England from which port he sailed to the United States.  Landing in New York, he
proceeded at once to Marengo, Iowa, where he remained three weeks and then came to Mt.
Vernon, which has since been his home.  He began life here as a farm hand in the employ of James
Smyth, with whom he remained three months, and for three weeks he was similarly employed by
Colonel [Robert] Smyth.  At the end of that time he accepted a position in the lumber yard of Col.
R. Smyth & Co., at Mt. Vernon, and a year later purchased an interest in the business.  This
partnership lasted for some time and then he purchased his partner’s interests, and has since
continued to be identified with the lumber business of his adopted city.  In May, 1900, he took into
partnership with him his son, Jay [James] C., and under the firm name of D.L. Boyd & Son is
continued with marked success. On the advent of his son into the firm, he became connected with
the banking business as cashier of the Mt. Vernon Bank, and is now holding that position.  His
intimate knowledge and extensive acqaintance with the people who do business in Mt. Vernon make
him a valuable acquisition to the bank.  On the 8th of December, 1870, Mr. Boyd was united in
marriage with Miss Margaret Craig...  Mr. Boyd is a faithful and consistent member of the
Presyterian church, and in politics is an ardent Republican.  For two years he efficiently served as
mayor of Mt. Vernon [1877 - 1878], and has been a member of the school board for many years,
while he is now serving as one of the trustees of Cornell College.  He is a very pleasant and
courteous gentleman, who takes a deep interest in every enterprise which he believes will be of
public benefit, and he stands deservedly high in both business and social circles."

In 1875 he was granted American citizenship.  His business interests also included grain and
livestock.  He died in Mt. Vernon in 1919.  His three children were William W., Florence, and
James Craig.  Living descendants today are all from James C. (Jay) Boyd (1872 - 1943) whose four
sons Robert, William, James, and Donald each had families with children.

Donald Lindsey Boyd
New Carlisle, Ohio

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