Thomas Moulding
Thomas Moulding was born in Warrington, England on a memorable and sad day for that country, Friday 18 October 1805, the day Admiral Nelson was shot at the battle of Trafalgar. War and pestilence brought misery and destitution to the homes of the poor during his early childhood. His father died before he was born, and when seven years of age he was at work earning a small pittance to help his widowed mother and grandparents keep the wolf of hunger from the door. No free schools then - the only school he ever attended was the Sabbath school, where he was taught how to read. Learning to read opened up a broad field of knowledge and even at this early age he was aiming to climb to the top.
At ten he was grappling with hard questions in mathematics, at this time working in a cotton factory fourteen hours a day. Many a time, after the long day of toil, difficult problems were passing through his brain. "By the flickering light of the fire with my slate on the bars, I worked them out before I slept" he said, "and many, many times as I lay in bed partly sleeping and waking, have I worked out difficult problems in algebra, and by the light of the moon placed the figures and demonstrations on my slate, we being too poor even to afford candles".
As he grew to manhood he became a cotton spinner and, when almost prostrated by hard work, his knowledge of figures helped him. For some years he was manager of a large cotton factory and took a prominent part in the affairs of the town.
On Wednesday 16 March 1825 at Daresbury Old Church, Warrington he married Rachel Bates. Children Thomas, Elizabeth and James were born in the next four years. In 1832 John was born and died, probably due the Cholera outbreak. In 1838 twins Esther and Eliza were born but both died, this time possibly due to a typhus epidemic. John J, Esther E, William and Charles all survived but in 1844 Arthur was born and lived only 3 years, again possibly due to the typhus and influenza epidemic of 1847. Emma and Susan were born and thrived but Arthur Henry was born just before emigrating to America and died either en route or shortly after embarkation.
It is quite possible that the elder children were taught by the Vicar of the Daresbury Old Church who used to teach other children besides his own. It just so happens that he was the father of Lewis Carroll, the well known author of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass. Carroll was born in the Daresbury parsonage in 1832 and grew up there till 1843.
Through the 30s and 40s Thomas, as well as managing the cotton mill, was a local preacher, one of the directors of the Mechanics' Institute, superintendent of a large Sunday school and an active temperance worker and advocate. During the time of the famine in England in 1847, Thomas and Rachel were actively engaged in alleviating the suffering of the poor. They were much respected and loved by a large number of friends.
Thomas, Rachel and their remaining family of ten landed in America on the first day of May, 1851, and came to Chicago during the same month. He remained only a short time there and bought a place adjoining Judge Wilson at Geneva, and started James and Elizabeth in business there. James soon after died and he sold the place and bought a farm at Campton, Kane County, Illinois, moving there in the spring of 1853. Another son, Frank, was born in 1854 and later became a doctor.
Thomas farmed the land wisely and the 1870 and 1880 agricultural censuses show a steady development of pasture, woodland and tilled land with a wide variety of livestock, grain, dairy produce, fruit and vegetables. As well as farming, the Directory of Secret Societies in Chicago shows that he was a conductor of the Sons of Temperance movement, ie he gave Sunday Services to the group, who lived in a colony style. At the time of his death he had been a total abstainer for over fifty years.
Rachel Moulding of Campton died on Tuesday 10 March 1885 and Thomas died on Wednesday 02 September 1885 at the residence of his youngest son, Dr Frank C Moulding of Watertown, Wisconsin. Though quite feeble, he had a strong desire to visit all his children once more, but during his visit to his children in Wisconsin, took a severe cold which settled on his lungs, causing death after a short sickness. Thomas, Rachel and many children are buried at blackberry cemetery Elburn, Kane County, Illinois.
His life has been so pure, and good, and useful, that he was highly respected by all his friends and neighbors as he had been in the old world. He had a large circle of friends in Chicago, many of whom were out to sympathize with the bereaved children. It will be seen that Thomas, like Rachel, was in his eightieth year; he has had the large family of 15 children, 50 grand-children and 2 great-grand-children; 7 of the children and 32 grand-children were living at the time of his death. His last words to his children who stood by his dying bed were, "I have full faith in the love and tender mercy of God, I have tried to live in the cordence to his laws, and now, at the last, have few regrets. Both mother and I tried to set a good example to our children. God bless you and all the absent ones". 

