John Wesley Stevenson was born in Maryland in 1825 to Mathew and Jane (Gilson) Stevenson. Mathew Stevenson was a pioneer physician in Ohio. The photograph above was taken by Sandusky photographer Willard A. Bishop, who was his brother-in-law.
In the summer of 1853, Mr. Stevenson opened up a dry goods
store in the Reber block of downtown Sandusky. An advertisement which appeared
in the September 8, 1853 issue of the Sandusky
Daily Commercial Register indicated that the store had just
received a new shipment of goods from the east. The store sold fancy and staple
dry goods, boots and shoes, groceries, hardware, willow ware, and other
merchandise. The ad stated that the assortment and stock at Stevenson’s dry
goods store was not excelled by any other business in Sandusky.
By 1867, he listed his occupation in the city directory as produce merchant.
John’s wife was the former Caroline Converse Mathews. They married in July, 1853 in Worcester, Massachusetts. The couple had two children, Frederick Boyd Stevenson and Mary Stevenson, who married John Sweet. Frederick Boyd Stevenson had a long career in newspapers. He was on the staff of the Brooklyn Eagle in New York for twenty-seven years.
John W. Stevenson died on May 22, 1910, at his home at
921 Washington Street, at the age of 85. Rev. Ashton Thompson from Grace
Episcopal Church conducted funeral services for Mr. Stevenson, and burial was
at Oakland Cemetery. From 1865 until his death in 1910, John W. Stevenson and
his wife resided at what is now 603 West Washington Street, a home originally
owned by George Reber.
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