Born in
Franklin County, Pennsylvania, he moved with his family to
Greenfield, Ohio, at age 16, where he worked on a farm with his father. Despite having little education in Ohio, attending school only a few weeks a year, he expressed interest in becoming a lawyer. At age 19, he left Ohio to seek employment and worked four years at a factory in
Madison, New York. He returned to Ohio in 1833 and, finding his father deeply in debt, purchased his farm in partnership with his brother. Together they restored the farm to prosperity and improved the land with a water-powered mill. He married Anne M. Lewis, of Milan, Ohio, in 1834, and together they traveled to
Winnebago County, Illinois, in 1836, where they purchased
government land and started a farmstead. Noggle was still intent on entering the legal profession and spent much of his free time studying legal texts; an anecdote references that he carried a book of the works of
William Blackstone to read while tending his fields. In 1838, he was examined by the
Supreme Court of Illinois and admitted to the
Illinois State Bar Association, having never spent a day in a law office or law school. In 1839, Noggle sold his farm in Illinois and moved across the border into the
Wisconsin Territory. He settled at
Beloit and started a law practice. His practice flourished, doing business in Rock, Walworth, Jefferson, and Green counties in the Wisconsin Territory, as well as Winnebago and Boone counties in Illinois. ==Political career==