Boice Family
Submitted by Martha J. Kounse

Source: Greater Indianapolis by Jacob Piatt Dunn, 1910,
pages 1028-1032.
Augustin
Boice
Augustin BOICE has been engaged in the practice of
law in Indianapolis for more than thirty years and has long
held precedence as one of the leading members of the bar of
the capital city and such is his professional standing and
such the high regard in which he is held as a loyal and
upright citizen that there is a special propriety in according
him recognition in this history of "Greater Indianapolis" and
its people. He is an honored veteran of the Civil War, in
which he rendered gallant and prolonged service in the cause
of the Union and in the "piping times of peace, he has won
victories of equal worthiness.
Like many others who ha achieved distinction in a learned
profession, Augustin BOICE was born and reared on a
farm. He was a native of Cheshire Township, GALLIA COUNTY,
OHIO where he was ushered into the world on the 1st of
December 1842. He is a son of Jacob and Mary Stevens (BRADBURY)
BOICE, and is a scion of one of the sterling pioneer
families of the fine old Buckeye commonwealth. Jacob BOICE
was born in Fayette County, Pennsylvania on the 14th of
November 1811, and was a son of Joseph and Keziah (BOWMAN)
BOICE, both of whom were natives of New Jersey. In
1820, the family left the old Keystone state and removed to
Ohio, establishing a home in the wilds of Cheshire Township,
GALLIA COUNTY, where the father reclaimed a farm from
the virgin forest. The mother of the subject of this sketch
was the eldest daughter of Joseph and Elizabeth (STEVENS)
BRADBURY and was a native of the State of Maine, where
she was born on the 28th of January 1894. She accompanied her
parents on their removal to Ohio in the early pioneer epoch in
the history of that state. She was the seventh generation of
direct descent from Thomas BRADBURY, the immigrant who
settled in New England at least as early as 1634. The latter's
wife, Mary (PERKINS) BRADBURY was a daughter of
John PERKINS of Ipswich, Massachusetts. Mary (PERKINS)
BRADBURY arrived with her father's family in Boston
from Bristol, England on the ship "Lyon" February 5, 1631 and
Roger Williams, a noted and historical character was a fellow
passenger. Interesting but somber is the following record
concerning Mary (PERKINS) BRADBURY:........
Mr. BOICE also a direct descendant from Major
PIKE through his daughter Sarah, who became the wife of
Rev. John Storkman. He also descended from Rev. John
WHEELWRIGHT, of Boston.
Thomas BRADBURY was born in Esex County, England in
1610 and early in 1634 he appeared in Agamenticus, now Yorke,
Maine as the agent of Sir Fernando Gorges, the proprietor of
the Province of Maine. He was one of the founders of
Salisbury, Massachusetts...
At the time when the BOICE family settled in
GALLIA COUNTY OHIO, that section was practically
unreclaimed from the forest and thus the conditions
encountered were those that fall to the lot of the average
pioneer of the locality and period. Those were the days of the
log cabin and spinning wheel. Money was very scare and even
calico was commanding fifty cents a yard. On this score the
pioneers found it necessary to raise flax, out of which they
made the greater portion of their clothing.... When the father
of Augustin BOICE was comparatively a young man, he
served practical apprenticeship at the carpenter trade and
during his early manhood, he was a contractor and builder,
having erected many of the houses, barns, and bridges in the
section in which the family home was maintained. He was a man
of sterling integrity and vigorous mentality and he was called
upon to serve in various posts of public trust and
responsibility, including those of township trustee and clerk.
In the climacteric period leading up to the Civil War he was a
stanch abolitionist and in 1852 he supported the "free soil"
ticket. At the time of the war he was known as a radical and
uncompromising supporter of the cause of the Republican party.
The representative of the BRADBURY family in Ohio were equally
strenuous in their opposition to the slavery question and all
of its male members were stanch Republicans. The village of
Kyger, which was the voting place of Cheshire Township,
GALLIA COUNTY, was an effectively managed substation on
the line of the historical Underground Railroad. Among the
scenes witnessed by Mr. BOICE in his schoolboy days was
the searching of the village with bloodhounds for runaway
slaves. The parents of Mr. BOICE continued to maintain
their home in GALLIA COUNTY, OHIO until their deaths,
and the old homestead farm is still in the possession of the
family.
On the 7th of August, 1862, Mr. BOICE enlisted as a
private in Company B, of the 91st OVI, which was recruited in
Gallia, Lawrence, Scioto, Adams, Pike and Jackson counties and
which was mobilized at Portsmouth, Ohio where it remained
about two weeks-a period devoted to hard drilling and the
securing of proper equipment. On the 26th of August, the
regiment received its guns and ammunition and on that same
day, five companies, including that of which Mr. BOICE
was a member, were sent to the mouth of Big Sandy River to
repel a threatened raid. This raid failed to materialize and
they were thence sent to Guyandotte, West Virginia and then to
Ironton, Ohio where the remainder of the regiment
joined them a few days later. On the 7th of September 1862,
the regiment was regularly mustered into United States service
and Mr. BOICE was appointed one of the corporals of his
company. At that time, the Confederate forces were making
strong efforts to drive the Union forces back to the Ohio in
the states of Kentucky and Virginia. Colonel Lighburn had been
defeated at Fayetteville, West Virginia and the 91st Ohio was
sent to Point Pleasant, West Virginia, to assist in checking
the enemy. It arrived there on the 14th of September and
remained until the 26th when it started on its first raid up
the Kanawha. The object of this movement was to surprise, and
if possible, to capture the Confederate force at Buffalo. The
regiment marched all night and struck the enemy just at
daylight. Completely surprising them with the result that the
whole Confederate force fled, leaving the camp in the hands of
the Northern troops. The doughty Southerners had been
preparing their breakfast and left their alluring supply of
chickens and turkeys but the captors did not have time to
indulge their appetites. A considerable amount of dry goods,
boots, shores, etc., which the Confederate soldiers had
secured in raids were left behind in the camp and various
articles in this store of goods were appropriated by the "Boys
in Blue." The 91st heard first heard the shriek of hostile s?
but as the enemy had aimed high, the members of this Ohio
regiment were not injured, though it must be confessed that a
good portion of them found their hair exercising peculiar
propensities. The Cavalry, which was to cooperate in the
attack, failed to reach its designated points on times, so
most of the enemy escaped. In October, the regiment with about
20,000 other troops advanced up the Kanawha, drove the enemy
out, and reestablished the outpost at Fayetteville. Here,
winter quarters were built, and during that winter and the
following spring, Mr. BOICE's regiment did much severe
guard duty and drilling. In addition to which it assisted in
building a strong fort, which later became of much value. In
May 1863, the Confederate forces made a two days' attack upon
Fayetteville, but were repulsed. The fight consisted largely
of an artillery duel and as the Union forces were protected by
forts, their losses were small. In July, the 91st Regiment
started forth in pursuit of Morgan, who was at the time making
his memorable raid through Ohio and while they succeeded in
capturing thirty of his men, they failed to encounter his main
forces. After the capture of Morgan had been effected, the
regiment returned to Fayetteville. In the fall of 1863, it
participated in two expeditions to Lewisburg. The first of
these expeditions occurred in November and involved much hard
marching owing to the rapid retreat of the enemy, and the only
satisfactory result was the burning of the excellent winter
quarters which had been established by the Confederates. In
December was made the second expedition and again the enemy
failed to stand for an engagement, through the Union troops
again had the privilege of destroying the winter quarters,
which had been rebuilt. In the great campaign initiated in
1864, the 91st Ohio endured to the full the vicissitudes,
dangers and privations marking the progress of the same and it
was denied its full share of honors. The regiment marched more
than twelve hundred miles and was actively engaged in twelve
battles within that year, including the Sheridan Battle in the
Shenandoah Valley. It is a matter of record that this regiment
never failed to respond to any call made upon it and that it
always acquitted itself with battles and marches, up to the
time he was wounded except in May and June 1864, when he
endured the agony of being incapacitated and the result of an
attack of measles and the complications resulting there from.
His regiment was a member of the Second Brigade, Second
Division of the Army of West Virginia, commanded by General
Cook and it was prominently concerned in Sheridan's operations
in the Shenadoah Valley. Concerning the history of this
regiment, further data are given in the following statements
which are worthy of perpetuation in this connection: .....
On the 24th of August 1864, at the battle of Halltown, an
engagement incidental to Sheridan's campaign, Mr. BOICE
received a severe rifle shot wound in his right arm, resulting
in the resection of the middle third of the humerus. This
wound nearly entailed fatal results and it was considered by
the attending surgeons phenomenal that he recovered, although
it was more than a year before the wound finally healed. He
was permanently disabled for further field service and on
account of this disability he received his honorable discharge
on the 29th of May 1865.
After the close of the war, Mr. BOICE resumed his
educational work. In the autumn of 1865, he was matriculated
in the Ohio University at Athens in which institution he
competed the academic course and was graduated as a member of
the class of 1869, receiving the degree of Bachelor of Arts.
While an undergraduate he was a prominent member of the
Philomathean Literary Society and was considered on of the
strongest and most versatile debaters in the college. He
represented his society in its literary exhibition at
commencement in 1868. While a student in the university, he
took up the study of law and later continued his reading of
the same under the preceptorship of his uncle, Honorable
Joseph BRADBURY, of GALLIA COUNTY, OHIO and in
September 1870, he proved himself eligible for and was
admitted to the bar of his native state at Athens. In the
following month he came to Indianapolis and entered in
processional partnership with his college classmate, John L.
McMaster, who is now serving on the bench of the
Superior Court of Marion County. This effective and mostly
pleasing alliance continued for more than a score of years
within which the interested principals in the same gained high
prestige and marked success in their profession. Mr. BOICE
as already intimated, showed dialectic powers while still
student in college and his predilections in this line have of
course became accentuated and rendered symmetrical through his
long and able services as a trail lawyer. Few members of the
Indiana bar area more thoroughly grounded in the minutiae of
the science of jurisprudence and few have to their credit a
larger number of distinctive victories in connection with
important litigated causes. He is at present general attorney
for a number of representative insurance companies and is
counsel for various important corporate interests.
Ever aligned under the banner of the Republican party, Mr.
BOICE has been a stalwart worker in behalf of its cause
and his first vote was cast while he was in the hospital at
Baltimore, Maryland in October 1864 where he availed himself
of the privilege given to soldiers to exercise the right of
franchise no matter where located, each being accredited to
his respective home. He recovered sufficiently to travel and
was given a furlough to go home. He arrived at his home in
Gallia County on the day of the presidential election and was
thus enabled to cast his vote in support of President Lincoln
for a second term. From that time to the present, he has never
failed to vote at every presidential, state, county, township
and city election. The honors and emoluments of public office
have never had allurement for Mr. BOICE and the only
civil office of which he was ever incumbent was that of
Treasurer of his native township. Mr. BOICE is
affiliated with Delta Tau Delta College fraternity and is one
of the appreciative and valued members of George H. Thomas
Post No. 17 Grand Army of the Republic, and also of the Union
Veteran Legion, and has for many years being actively
identified with the Indian State Bar Association and the
Indianapolis Bar Association. In his profession he is eligible
for practice in all of the courts of his native state and in
the Supreme Court of the United States. As a citizen, Mr.
BOICE has ever stood exemplar of loyal and genuine public
spirit, and he is fully in sympathy with the high civil ideals
of the Indianapolis Commercial Club, in which he holds
membership, as does he also in the University of Indian and
the Marion Club. He was one of the organizers of the Central
Life Insurance Company of Indianapolis of which he was general
counsels as well as a director. He has long been a zealous
member of the First Presbyterian Church at Indianapolis, in
which his wife also was a devoted worked and valued member.
On the 8th of August 1872, was solemnized the marriage of
Mr. BOICE and Miss Adela Vernee JOHNSON, who was
born and reared in Athens County, Ohio and who was a daughter
of the late Dr. William P. JOHNSON a distinguished
physician and surgeon, who served as surgeon on the 8th OVI
during the Civil War and was a prominent and influential
citizen of Ohio, where he represented Athens County in the
legislature and took up his residence in Indianapolis in 1869,
here he passed the remainder of his life, holding a position
of distinction in his profession and being a citizen to whom
was accorded the highest measure of popular confidence and
esteem. Mrs. BOICE was summoned to the life eternal on
the 28th of June 1906. The only child of Mr. and Mrs. BOICE,
Parker Johnson BOICE was born in Indianapolis on the
10th of May 1873, and was a graduated in Princeton University
as a member of the class of 1897 and was a young man of fine
character and great promise. His death occurred on the 7th of
February, 1904.