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| D. Ames Bigelow was born on November 24, 1839,
in Chester, Massachusetts. He moved to Kewanee, Illinois, in 1856.
In 1862, he enlisted in Company A, 124th Illinois Volunteers and served
in the Civil War as an aide de camp on the staff of General Geddes.
In August, 1868, he came to the new town of Ames, Iowa, returning in November
to Kewanee to marry Sarah E. Moore and then to bring her to Ames.
He and Sarah had four children: Margaret M. (Tot), Robert E., Pearl C.,
and Alida J..
D. A. Bigelow was one of Ames's first merchants.
He went into business here with Henry C. Huntington, who had moved to Ames
from Rochester, Vermont. Together they opened a dry goods store in 1867
on Onondaga (Main) Street.
Bigelow and Huntington asked George Galen Tilden,
who also had grown up in Rochester, Vermont, to join their partnership
in 1869. Bigelow, Huntington & Tilden remained in business
until 1883 when George Tilden bought out his partners. Bigelow and
Huntington then opened another store a few doors to the west on Onondaga
and operated under the name of Bigelow & Huntington. D. A. Bigelow
served on the Story County Board of Supervisors from 1878 through 1880
(when he was the chairman). He died in 1890. |
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| This 1895 view of Onondaga (Main) Street facing
east shows where the Bigelow & Huntington dry goods store was located
after the 1883 move to the Tilden Block. |
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| TILDEN BLOCK - The new two-front store building
that George Galen Tilden constructed in 1883 was in the middle of the same
block on the north side of Onondaga (Main) Street as his original store.
Although George Tilden built the structure, Tilden's store never occupied
this building. Instead, Tilden traded this building for that of his
partners, D. A. Bigelow and H. C. Huntington for their interests in Bigelow,
Huntington & Tilden and for the original building; so Tilden then
stayed in the earlier location. The store front with the Ulysses
Grant memorial was the dry goods portion at right. Bigelow &
Huntington occupied the Tilden Block building until 1900.
Pictured from left to right: M. K. Smith; J.
J. Grove (standing in west doorway); Margaret Mitchell (later, Margaret
Mitchell Brown); and D. A. Bigelow (standing in east doorway). Today
the address would be 213-215 Main Street. |
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| Souvenir
Edition of The Ames Intelligencer, Midwinter, 1897
BIGELOW & SMITH - Interior views of
each of the two rooms in which the business of this firm is housed are
shown in this issue. It is the oldest general merchandise business
in the city. In August, 1868, D.A. Bigelow and H.C. Huntington came
from Kewanee, Ill., to this city and bought out L.T. Larned who was among
the first to engage in business here. Mr. Bigelow had been through
the war, studied in the old Chicago University, taught school, tested the
possibilities of Kansas and fed cattle previous to coming to Ames.
In the last undertaking he had accumulated some capital which he put against
the experience of his partner who had managed a store with a happier result
than sometimes attends such combinations. In 1868 the south side
had the larger share of the business of the city. The firm was successful
from the first. In May, 1869, Geo. G. Tilden was admitted to partnership
and remained a member of the firm until 1883. Two years afterward
Mr. Huntington disposed of his interest. When this firm began to
do business it had a wide field. Customers came from a distance of
twenty miles. As the population increased and lines of railway were
built the trading area was lessened but this did not diminish the business
it transacted. It maintained its lead. After the withdrawal
of Messrs. Tilden and Huntington the firm was known as D.A. Bigelow and
Co. On the death of Mr. Bigelow in 1890 it was changed to Bigelow
& Smith. It carries a well selected stock of clothing, boots
and shoes, and dry goods and its volume of business requires the help of
five or six clerks. |
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| The Ames
Intelligencer, March 13, 1890
D.A. Bigelow died at his home in Ames Sunday
morning, March 9th, after an illness of nearly six weeks. The death,
not wholly unexpected, of one long identified with the best interests of
our town is felt with deep sorrow by the entire community. The deceased
was born November 24, 1839, at Chester, Massachusetts, and came in 1856
to Kewanee, Illinois, where in 1862 he enlisted in Company A, 124th Illinois
volunteers serving until the end of the war; retiring from service with
the rank of 1st Lieutenant. During the latter part of the war he
served on the staff of General Geddes; and was known by his comrades to
be a gallant soldier. In August 1868 he came to the then new town
of Ames and in November of the same year returned to Kewanee where he was
married by the Rev. Mr. K.W. Benton, who Tuesday conducted the religious
services at his funeral. His wife and four children survive to mourn
his loss.
From the time of his first coming to this
place he has striven to promote the welfare of the town and community in
every possible way. The civic organizations to which he belonged
knew him as a faithful and efficient worker. He was long a member
of the Baptist church where his loss will be deeply felt. As a member
of the school board his liberal views and constant interest added greatly
to the efficiency of our public schools. As a business man, a citizen
and friend, at home and abroad his life was deserving of praise.
He was sincerely attached to every worthy object in life and met his death
with the courage and resignation which becomes a Christian.
The funeral services were held at the house
Tuesday afternoon, March 11th, and were attended by a large and sorrowing
company, which included the President and faculty of I.A.C., the Sons of
Veterans, the Masonic lodge and the G.A.R. post. The services at
the cemetery were conducted by the two latter organizations, to both of
which he belonged; the Masonic fraternity being in charge of the W.M.C.E.
Hunt and marshaled by Capt. J.R. Lincoln.... |
(Photo from the album of historian
Gladys Meads)
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| This is the house that stood near the corner,
between Tenth and Eleventh Streets on the west side of Duff Avenue. The
house originally belonged to Ames businessman D. A. Bigelow and later to
John E. Foster. After his death his family continued to live in this
house for some years. The house was removed for major hospital expansion
in the 1950s and eventually the emergency entrance to Mary Greeley Medical
Center came to be located where the Bigelow house had been. |
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