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        <title>US Biographies Project - Clark County Biographies</title>
        <description>Clark County Kentucky Biographies</description>
        <link>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/list.php?385</link>
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            <title>Taylor, Hubbard (no replies)</title>
            <link>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7452,7452#msg-7452</link>
            <description><![CDATA[ HISTORY OF KENTUCKY, by Lewis Collins, and J.A. &amp; U.P. James, published <br />
1847.  Reprinted by Henry Clay Press, Lexington, Ky., 1968, p. 235 <br />
[Clark county].<br />
<br />
Among the noted citizen of Clark, was the late venerable HUBBARD TAYLOR.  <br />
he emigrated to the county at a very early period, was a senator for a <br />
number of years in the Kentucky legislature, and on several occasions <br />
was chosen as one of the presidential electors.  He was disginguished <br />
for is patriotism, his hospitality and public spirit.  He died in the <br />
year 1842, beloved and mourned by all who knew him.<br />
<br />
Taylor<br />
=<br />
none<br />
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[<a href="http://www.rootsweb.com/~kygenweb/kybiog/clark/taylor.h.txt"  rel="nofollow">www.rootsweb.com</a>]]]></description>
            <dc:creator>MarthaCrossSargent</dc:creator>
            <category>Clark County Biographies</category>
            <pubDate>Fri, 16 Mar 2007 10:22:47 -0400</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <guid>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7451,7451#msg-7451</guid>
            <title>Taylor Family (no replies)</title>
            <link>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7451,7451#msg-7451</link>
            <description><![CDATA[ Taken from old clippings dealing with Kentucky family history, newspaper<br />
unknown. These clippings are about 100 years old (1997).  Reprinted in<br />
Kentucky Explorer, Volume 10, Number 3 - August, 1995.  pp. 95-96. Clark<br />
County.<br />
<br />
    Col. George Taylor (who died in 1792) married Rachel Gibson.  Their son,<br />
Jonathan Taylor, married Ann Berry and had George T., who married Sarah<br />
Fishback and owned &quot;Basin Springs,&quot; Clark County, Kentucky.  The latter's<br />
son, Robert Stuart Taylor, bought out the other heirs.  He married first<br />
Nancy Huston and had:  Sallie, married Robert Cunningham, Anna married<br />
Squire Tevis of Clark County, Kentucky.  Robert Stuart Taylor married<br />
second Bettie B. Thompson (a descendant of Col. William Thompson, an<br />
officer of the English army, whose daughter Martha married James Taylor),<br />
and had R. Stuart Taylor, married Ettie Jones; Dr. Thompson J. Taylor,<br />
married Quinn; Bettie Martin Taylor, married Joe G. Lyle; Mary Betts;<br />
George William Taylor, married J. V. Logan; T. Graham Taylor.<br />
    The children of R. Stuart Taylor and Ettie Jones are:  Roger, Robert S.,<br />
Jr., Ettie, Walter, Lucy; live near Pine Grove, Kentucky.<br />
    The children of Dr. T. J. Taylor and Mollie Quinn are Robert S., Bettie<br />
Murphy, Thompson, Quinn, live at Richmond, Kentucky.<br />
    Bettie Martin Taylor and Joe G. Lyle, of Pine Grove have:  Taylor, Lyle,<br />
Elizabeth Thompson, Josephine, Tevis Lyle, Virginie Cooper Lyle.<br />
    George William Taylor and Mary McCord Taylor of Great Falls, Mont. have: <br />
McCord Taylor, Elizabeth and Mildred.<br />
    Jessie Taylor and J. V. Logan of Orange County, Fla. have Elizabeth<br />
Thompson Logan.<br />
    Graham Taylor lives in Clark County, Kentucky.<br />
    Robert S. Taylor, Sr. died at Basin Springs, December, 1886.  The place is<br />
so called for the spring, which is in a great rock, shaped like a basin. <br />
Has never gone dry.<br />
    Hubbard Taylor was early surveyor of Kentucky.  He married Clarissa Milnor<br />
and their son, Hubbard Minor Taylor married Mary Ann Arnold, and his son<br />
Thomas Arnold Taylor married Sarah A. Thompson (a descendant of Col.<br />
William Thompson of the English Army and sister of Mrs. Robert S. Taylor,<br />
Sr.) and had Zilpha Taylor who married William S. Smith of Danville,<br />
Kentucky who has Hugh Smith, Ernest, Herford and Zilpha, Jr.<br />
    Thomas Arnold Taylor and Sarah A. Thompson had:  Mamie married L. P.<br />
Schultz, Hattie M. married William H. Lynch, Lillian married Henry Wood.<br />
    Mamie B. and L. P. Schultz of Sykesville, Mo. have Lillian Louise Schultz.<br />
Mr. and Mrs. Lynch live in Indianapolis, Mrs. [sic] and Mrs. Wood in<br />
Cincinnati.  Thomas Arnold Taylor died January, 1887.<br />
<br />
Taylor Gibson Fishback Huston Cunningham Tevis Thompson Jones Quinn Lyle <br />
Betts Logan Milnor Arnold Smith Schultz Lynch Wood<br />
=<br />
Richmond-Madison-KY MT FL Danville-Boyle-KY IN OH<br />
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[<a href="http://www.rootsweb.com/~kygenweb/kybiog/clark/taylor.txt"  rel="nofollow">www.rootsweb.com</a>]]]></description>
            <dc:creator>MarthaCrossSargent</dc:creator>
            <category>Clark County Biographies</category>
            <pubDate>Fri, 16 Mar 2007 10:22:07 -0400</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <guid>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7450,7450#msg-7450</guid>
            <title>Suddarth, William (no replies)</title>
            <link>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7450,7450#msg-7450</link>
            <description><![CDATA[ HISTORY OF KENTUCKY, by Lewis Collins, and J.A. &amp; U.P. James, published <br />
1847.  Reprinted by Henry Clay Press, Lexington, Ky., 1968, p. 235 <br />
[Clark county].<br />
<br />
Colonel WILLIAM SUDDARTH, was one of the earliest settlers in Clark <br />
county, and the last surviving member of the convention which framed the <br />
present constitution of Kentucky.  He was a gallant soldier under Wayne <br />
in the campaign of 1793.  For thirty years he was the county surveyor of <br />
Clark.  He was a man of intelligence, with the manners of an accomplish <br />
gentleman.  He died at the residence of one of his sons in Bath county, <br />
in the year 1845, having nearly attained his eightieth years.<br />
<br />
Suddarth Wayne<br />
=<br />
Bath-KY<br />
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[<a href="http://www.rootsweb.com/~kygenweb/kybiog/clark/suddarth.w.txt"  rel="nofollow">www.rootsweb.com</a>]]]></description>
            <dc:creator>MarthaCrossSargent</dc:creator>
            <category>Clark County Biographies</category>
            <pubDate>Fri, 16 Mar 2007 10:21:21 -0400</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <guid>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7449,7449#msg-7449</guid>
            <title>Stone, Leroy D. (no replies)</title>
            <link>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7449,7449#msg-7449</link>
            <description><![CDATA[ History of Lawrence, Orange and Washington Counties, Indiana From the<br />
Earliest Time to the Present; Together with Interesting Biographical<br />
Sketches, Reminiscences, Notes, Etc.  Chicago, Goodspeed Bros., &amp; Co.,<br />
Publishers, 1884. Weston A. Goodspeed, Leroy C. Goodspeed, Charles L.<br />
Goodspeed.  Clark County.<br />
<br />
LEROY D. STONE is a native of Clark County, Ky., where he was born March<br />
6, 1827, the fifth of seven children of William and Nancy (Oliver) Stone. <br />
The parents were natives of Kentucky, and came to Indiana in 1831,<br />
locating first in Jennings County, but two years later coming to this<br />
county (Orange County, Indiana), where they lived well known and highly<br />
respected until their deaths.  The father's death occurred August 30,<br />
1840, and the mother's, November 15, 1869.  While yet a boy, Leroy learned<br />
the cabinet trade at Paoli, under Henry Miller, and in 1855 he engaged in<br />
that business in Montgomery County, contining until 1869, then moving to<br />
Kansas, where he engaged in farming about nine years.  He then returned to<br />
Montgomery County, and soon afterward to this county, where he yet is<br />
(Orangeville Township).  January 7, 1856, he married Mahala J. Durham, and<br />
eight of their nine children are living:  Charles B., Mary, who married<br />
Frederick Geiger; Cora L., the wife of William Porter; Kate D., Joseph H.,<br />
Frank, Albert and Harry.  Mr. Stone is a stanch Republican and he and wife<br />
are members of the Methodist Episcopal Church. <br />
<br />
Stone Oliver Durham Geiger Porter<br />
=<br />
Jennings-IN Paoli-Orange-IN KS Montgomery-IN<br />
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[<a href="http://www.rootsweb.com/~kygenweb/kybiog/clark/stone.ld.txt"  rel="nofollow">www.rootsweb.com</a>]]]></description>
            <dc:creator>MarthaCrossSargent</dc:creator>
            <category>Clark County Biographies</category>
            <pubDate>Fri, 16 Mar 2007 10:20:35 -0400</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <guid>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7448,7448#msg-7448</guid>
            <title>Simpson, James (no replies)</title>
            <link>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7448,7448#msg-7448</link>
            <description><![CDATA[ Lawyers and Lawmakers of Kentucky, by H. Levin, editor, 1897. Published<br />
by Lewis Publishing Company, Chicago.  Reprinted by Southern Historical<br />
Press.  p. 78.  Clark County.<br />
<br />
JAMES SIMPSON, judge of the court of appeals of Kentucky, and one of the<br />
most distinguished jurists that the state has produced, was born March<br />
16, 1796, in Belfast, Ireland, and died on the 1st of May, 1876, in<br />
Winchester, Kentucky.  His father, James Simpson Sr., a man of classical<br />
education and broad mental culture, became a minister of the Presbyterian<br />
church and was also an educator of note.  On account of political<br />
complication he was obliged to flee from Ireland, and embarked for America<br />
with his wife and family when the future chief justice was but eighteen<br />
months old.  As he stood on the deck of the vessel which was to bear him<br />
to freedom and future prosperity, the last sight which met his gaze was<br />
his old home in flames, enkindled by the hands of his enemies!  The vessel<br />
on which he embarked bore him in safety to the shores of the new world,<br />
and he took up his residence in Pittsburg [sic], Pennsylvania, where he<br />
remained for about ten years.  During that time his wife died.  With his<br />
children he removed to Clark county, Kentucky, and from that time on<br />
Judge Simpson was a resident of this state.<br />
     James Simpson attended the common schools, but the greater part of<br />
his education was acquired under the direction of his father, who was<br />
well fitted to train the young mind and shape its habits of thought. The<br />
son was of a very studious disposition, and his eager desire for<br />
knowledge, supplemented by a retentive memory, enabled him to acquire a<br />
fund of information far in advance of many who had much superior school<br />
privileges.  He read the Latin classics in the original and was well<br />
informed on all subjects now usually embraced in the high school course.<br />
He was ambitious, and with one object in view pursued his course from<br />
the earliest days of his intellectual development to fit himself for the<br />
practice of law.<br />
     On the 18th of February, 1817, before attaining his majority, he<br />
applied to the county court for a certificate showing him to be &quot;a person<br />
of honesty, probity and good demeanor,&quot; which was granted him, and<br />
immediately after reaching the legal age, at the first term of the circuit<br />
court, he procured a license to practice law.  He had read and studied<br />
under the masterful guidance of Hon. Samuel Hanson, and his preparation for<br />
the bar was so thorough and complete that at the first term of court, after<br />
he joined the legal fraternity, he appeared as attorney in a number of<br />
cases.  For ten years he was associated in practice with Hon. Chilton<br />
Allen, and almost from the beginning of his professional career he had an<br />
extensive clientage.  He was a man evidently marked out for greatness, and<br />
his career was one unbroken series of splendid successes.  His fitness for<br />
political honors and his ability to meet the weighty questions which<br />
affect the welfare of the commonwealth led to his being elected twice to<br />
the general assembly of the commonwealth, where he was one of the leading<br />
members on the floor of the house.  In 1860, on account of the gravity<br />
of the political situation growing out of the secession movement, he was<br />
elected to the state senate.  He served one term in that body during those<br />
exciting days, and it was largely through his instrumentality that the<br />
state remained in the Union, and he cast her influence with that side.<br />
Except as a representative in the lower house and in the senate of<br />
Kentucky, he held no political office.  In 1835 he was appointed judge of<br />
the circuit court to succeed the Hon. Richard French, occupying the<br />
circuit court bench until 1847.  His course was such as to add honor and<br />
dignity to the office with which he was honored, and he won the confidence<br />
of the bar and the public by his upright and unflinching administration of<br />
justice and the wisdom of his decisions.<br />
     The masterful ability of Judge Simpson insured him still further<br />
honors, and in 1847 he received an appointment to the highest judicial<br />
body of the state, being made associate justice of the court of appeals.<br />
He served thus until the adoption of the new state constitution in 1850<br />
and thereafter was one of the four justices of the new court and filled<br />
the exalted position of chief justice of the court for two years.  In<br />
1852 he was elected to the supreme bench for another term of eight years,<br />
during which time he again served for two years as chief justice. On the<br />
expiration of his term in 1860 he declined to enter on a  political<br />
contest for re-election, being conscientiously opposed to making judicial<br />
office a football of party prejudice or favor.  Devotedly attached to his<br />
profession, systematic and methodical in habit, sober and discreet in<br />
judgment, calm in temper, diligent in research, conscientious in the<br />
discharge of every duty, courteous and kind in demeanor and inflexibly<br />
just on all occasions, the qualities enabled Judge Simpson to take first<br />
rank among those who have held the highest judicial office in the state,<br />
and made him the conservator of that justice wherein is the safeguard of<br />
individual liberty and happiness and the defense of our national<br />
institution.  His reported opinions are monuments to his profound legal<br />
learning and superior ability, more lasting than brass or marble and more<br />
honorable than battles fought and won. They show a thorough mastery of the<br />
questions involved, a rare simplicity of style and an admirable terseness<br />
and clearness in the statement of the principles upon which the opinions<br />
rest.  He fully comprehended and carried into practice Justinian's noble<br />
summary of the law's precepts: &quot;Juris precepta sunt haec: honeste rivere,<br />
alternum non cadere suum emque tribuere.&quot;  No judge of the court of<br />
appeals has evinced a clearer knowledge, a livelier conscience, a more<br />
industrious application than Judge Simpson.<br />
     On the 22d of November, 1840, the Judge united with the Presbyterian<br />
church, and in 1836 became an elder in the same.  He exemplified in his<br />
life that Christian spirit which ennobles those who truly follow in the<br />
footsteps of the lowly Nazarene, and endears them to their fellow men.<br />
His sage counsel, noble example and devotion to the best interests of<br />
the church make him a pillar of strength in upholding all that is best in<br />
life, and he breathed his last with a smile of infinite peace and content<br />
stamped upon his face, saying, &quot;The door is open; I must go in.&quot;<br />
     In early life Judge Simpson gave his political support to the Whig<br />
party, and on it dissolution became a Democrat, while during the war he<br />
was a conservative Unionist, but after the war was identified with the<br />
Democratic party until his death.  He, however, took but little part in<br />
politics, aside from voting and lending his influence to the measures best<br />
calculated to enhance the best interests of his city, county and state.<br />
     On the 22d of February, 1825, Judge Simpson was united in marriage<br />
to Miss Mary L. Caldwell, a daughter of Robert and Fanny (Irvine) Caldwell.<br />
The latter was a daughter of Colonel Christopher Irvine, of Richmond,<br />
Kentucky, and his wife was a daughter of Colonel Richard Calloway, and one<br />
of the three girls who were in the fort at Boonesboro with Daniel Boone in<br />
the early days of Kentucky's history.  They were captured by the Indians,<br />
but after three days were recaptured.  Robert Caldwell was an own cousin<br />
of John Caldwell Calhoun, the distinguished South Carolina statesman.<br />
Judge Simpson died at his home in Winchester, Kentucky, on the 1st day of<br />
May, 1876, in the eighty-first year of his age.  At his death Judge<br />
Simpson left two sons and three daughters, the latter being Fanny I.,<br />
who married Samuel F. Taylor and is now Mrs. Bottaile; Mary H., wife of<br />
James T. Thornton, of Kansas City, Missouri; and Carrie, wife of John A.<br />
Mills, of Winchester.  The sons are Isaac P., a lawyer of San Antonio,<br />
Texas; and James D., a member of the Clark county bar, cashier of the<br />
Citizens' National Bank and president of the Safety Building and Loan<br />
Association of Winchester.  For a number of years he was engaged in active<br />
practice, but for the past twenty years has devoted his attention to other<br />
business pursuits.<br />
     On the death of Judge Simpson many resolutions were passed, indicating<br />
the high respect and honor in which he was held throughout the state, and<br />
the sincere grief that was felt at his demise.  The court of appeals<br />
assembled in Frankfort, May 4, 1876, to take action thereon, and the<br />
resolutions which they passed included the following:<br />
     &quot;Resolved, That in the death of Judge Simpson the profession of<br />
which he was an ornament has lost one who was an upright judge, an able<br />
jurist and a zealous advocate.  Society has been deprived of one of its<br />
purest members and his family of a devoted and exemplary head.&quot;<br />
     At the meeting of the bar of Winchester, over which presided General<br />
John B. Huston, the following resolutions were passed:<br />
     &quot;Resolved, That as a member of the legal profession he illustrated<br />
in his long, successful career the noblest qualities in rarest<br />
combination; always true to his trusts, and competent to his task, kind<br />
and courteous to his associates, ever ready to help those beneath him<br />
on the ladder, and to give to them freely of his great abundance.<br />
     &quot;That in his long and distinguished services, whether as judge of<br />
the circuit court, or the court of appeals, he justly earned for himself<br />
an honorable and enduring fame secured to none in the annals of the<br />
commonwealth.<br />
     &quot;That in him we recognize not only the accomplished jurist but also<br />
the citizen without reproach, whose private life has been blameless, and<br />
who public career has added another star to the constellation of our<br />
country's honored names.<br />
     &quot;That as younger members of the profession we pay a cordial tribute<br />
to his memory for many acts of personal kindness and words of friendly<br />
counsel.  We accept the model which his life and character offer to us<br />
in all their harmonious and just proportions, and along the pathway of<br />
professional duty will turn to it and gather fresh encouragement and<br />
inspiration.&quot;<br />
<br />
Simpson Hanson Allen French Caldwell Irvine Calloway Taylor<br />
Bottaile Thornton Mills<br />
=<br />
SC MO TX PA Ireland<br />
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            <dc:creator>MarthaCrossSargent</dc:creator>
            <category>Clark County Biographies</category>
            <pubDate>Fri, 16 Mar 2007 10:19:52 -0400</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <guid>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7447,7447#msg-7447</guid>
            <title>Rupard, William (no replies)</title>
            <link>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7447,7447#msg-7447</link>
            <description><![CDATA[ A History of Kentucky Baptists From 1769 to 1885, Including More Than <br />
800 Biographical Sketches, J. H. Spencer, Manuscript Revised and <br />
Corrected by Mrs. Burilla B. Spencer, In Two Volumes.  Printed For the <br />
Author.  1886.  Republished By Church History Research &amp; Archives 1976 <br />
Lafayette, Tennessee. Vol. 2, pp 126-127 [Clark County]<br />
<br />
WILLIAM RUPARD is the most prominent minister now laboring among the <br />
churches of North District Association.  He was born in Clark county, <br />
Ky., Feb. 4, 1825.  He was educated in the common schools of his native <br />
county, commenced teaching, at the age of 18, and followed that <br />
occupation about 12 years. <br />
	He made a profession of religion, about 1841, and was baptized <br />
into the fellowship of Goshen church, by Thomas Boone.  About 1851, he <br />
commenced exercising in public prayer and exhortation, and was ordained <br />
to the ministry, by Thomas Boone and James Edmonson, in 1852.  He <br />
immediately took charge of Log Lick and Liberty churches, for whose <br />
benefit he had been ordained.  In January, 1855, he moved to Scott <br />
county, Illinois, where he labored in the ministry about a year, and <br />
baptized a number of converts.  In 1856, he was called back to Kentucky <br />
to fill the place made vacant by the death of the venerable Thomas <br />
Boone.  He immediately took charge of Goshen, Lulbegrud, Liberty and <br />
Cane Spring churches, all belonging to North District Association.  To <br />
these churches he has ministered, about 33 years.  Lulbegrud has not <br />
prospered; the other three have more than doubled their membership.  <br />
Besides the four churches named, Mr. Rupard has generally served two or <br />
three others, preaching to them on week days.  He has also traveled and <br />
preached much in Kentucky, Indiana and Ohio.  He was elected Clerk of <br />
North District Association, in 1852, and generally served in that <br />
capacity, till 1859.  Since the latter date, he has acted as Moderator <br />
of that Association.<br />
	Mr. Rupard is a man of high respectability and of spotless <br />
christian character.  He possesses fair preaching gifts, and has used <br />
them with much zeal and diligence, and with a good degree of success.  <br />
It seems a pity that his fine talents and extensive influence should be <br />
used against the cause of missions.<br />
<br />
Rupard Boone Edmonson<br />
=<br />
Scott-IL IN OH<br />
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            <dc:creator>MarthaCrossSargent</dc:creator>
            <category>Clark County Biographies</category>
            <pubDate>Fri, 16 Mar 2007 10:19:05 -0400</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <guid>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7446,7446#msg-7446</guid>
            <title>Ridgeway, Ninian (no replies)</title>
            <link>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7446,7446#msg-7446</link>
            <description><![CDATA[ A History of Kentucky Baptists From 1769 to 1885, Including More Than <br />
800 Biographical Sketches, J. H. Spencer, Manuscript Revised and <br />
Corrected by Mrs. Burilla B. Spencer, In Two Volumes.  Printed For the <br />
Author.  1886.  Republished By Church History Research &amp; Archives 1976 <br />
Lafayette, Tennessee. Vol. 2, p 125 [Clark County]<br />
<br />
NINIAN RIDGEWAY appears to have been raised up to the ministry, in <br />
Friendship church, in Clark county.  He was ordained about 1818, in <br />
which year he moved his membership to Old Goshen church.  After <br />
preaching here some four or five years, he moved to Missouri, and settled <br />
within the bounds of Salem Association.  It is known that he was among <br />
the ministers of that body as late as 1830.<br />
<br />
Ridgeway<br />
=<br />
MO<br />
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[<a href="http://www.rootsweb.com/~kygenweb/kybiog/clark/ridgeway.n.txt"  rel="nofollow">www.rootsweb.com</a>]]]></description>
            <dc:creator>MarthaCrossSargent</dc:creator>
            <category>Clark County Biographies</category>
            <pubDate>Fri, 16 Mar 2007 10:18:23 -0400</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <guid>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7445,7445#msg-7445</guid>
            <title>Mobley, C. W. (no replies)</title>
            <link>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7445,7445#msg-7445</link>
            <description><![CDATA[ History of Lawrence, Orange and Washington Counties, Indiana From the<br />
Earliest Time to the Present; Together with Interesting Biographical<br />
Sketches, Reminiscences, Notes, Etc.  Chicago, Goodspeed Bros., &amp; Co.,<br />
Publishers, 1884. Weston A. Goodspeed, Leroy C. Goodspeed, Charles L.<br />
Goodspeed.  Clark County.<br />
<br />
C. W. MOBLEY was born in Clarke [sic] County, Ky., February 25, 1821.  His<br />
father, Walter G., was a native of Maryland, born March 10, 1786, was a<br />
carpenter by trade, went to Kentucky when a young man, where he met and<br />
married Elizabeth Burton, a native of Fayette County, Ky., born in 1796.<br />
In 1829 they moved to Washington County, Ind., and engaged in farming,<br />
until their deaths, the former dying, March 16, 1876, his wife in 1880.<br />
Our subject's early life was passed on his father's farm and attending the<br />
schools of that day. He later learned the carpenter's trade and peddled<br />
clocks and tinware, continuing until 1855, with the exception of one year,<br />
when he was conductor on the L. N. A. &amp; C. R. R. In 1855 he entered the<br />
firm of Platt, Martin &amp; Gordon of Salem as clerk.  After four year's<br />
service he bought out the firm.  In 1863 he succeeded his former employer,<br />
D. B. Platt, in the manufacturing of wagons and carriages.  In 1865 he<br />
established a foundary and machine-shop.  In 1861 he married Mary Telle, a<br />
native of Philadelphia, Penn.  There are two children by this marriage -<br />
Fannie and Charles W.  Mr. Mobley's life has been one of great activity<br />
and industry and irreproachable integrity.  He is a Republican.  Mrs.<br />
Mobley was born July 30, 1834.<br />
<br />
Mobley Burton Platt Martin Gordon Telle<br />
=<br />
MD Fayette-KY Salem-Washington-IN PA<br />
<br />
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            <dc:creator>MarthaCrossSargent</dc:creator>
            <category>Clark County Biographies</category>
            <pubDate>Fri, 16 Mar 2007 10:17:39 -0400</pubDate>
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        <item>
            <guid>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7444,7444#msg-7444</guid>
            <title>Howard, John (no replies)</title>
            <link>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7444,7444#msg-7444</link>
            <description><![CDATA[ HISTORY OF KENTUCKY, by Lewis Collins, and J.A. &amp; U.P. James, published <br />
1847.  Reprinted by Henry Clay Press, Lexington, Ky., 1968, pp. 234-235 <br />
[Clark county].<br />
<br />
The Two Howard's creeks in Clark County derived their names from the <br />
venerable John Howard, a well-known citizen of Kentucky, who died some <br />
years ago in Fayette county.  He was the father of the late Governor <br />
Benjamin Howard, and of the first wife of Robert Wickliffe, Sen'r., Esq.  <br />
He held a pre-emption of one thousand acres of land at the mouth of each <br />
of these creeks.<br />
<br />
Howard Wickliffe<br />
=<br />
Fayette-KY<br />
<br />
[<a href="http://www.rootsweb.com/~kygenweb/kybiog/clark/howard.j.txt"  rel="nofollow">www.rootsweb.com</a>]]]></description>
            <dc:creator>MarthaCrossSargent</dc:creator>
            <category>Clark County Biographies</category>
            <pubDate>Fri, 16 Mar 2007 10:16:54 -0400</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <guid>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7443,7443#msg-7443</guid>
            <title>Hickman, Richard (no replies)</title>
            <link>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7443,7443#msg-7443</link>
            <description><![CDATA[ HISTORY OF KENTUCKY, by Lewis Collins, and J.A. &amp; U.P. James, published <br />
1847.  Reprinted by Henry Clay Press, Lexington, Ky., 1968, p. 235 <br />
[Clark county].<br />
<br />
General RICHARD HICKMAN, a lieutenant governor of the State, and acting <br />
governor during the absence of Governor Shelby in the campaign of 1813, <br />
was also a citizen of this county.  He was highly esteemed by his <br />
countrymen for his intelligence and many virtues.<br />
<br />
Hickman Shelby<br />
=<br />
none<br />
<br />
[<a href="http://www.rootsweb.com/~kygenweb/kybiog/clark/hickman.r.txt"  rel="nofollow">www.rootsweb.com</a>]]]></description>
            <dc:creator>MarthaCrossSargent</dc:creator>
            <category>Clark County Biographies</category>
            <pubDate>Fri, 16 Mar 2007 10:16:12 -0400</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <guid>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7442,7442#msg-7442</guid>
            <title>Hart, Joel T. (no replies)</title>
            <link>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7442,7442#msg-7442</link>
            <description><![CDATA[ Historical Sketches of Kentucky by Lewis Collins, Maysville, KY. and J. A.<br />
&amp; U. P. James, Cincinnati, 1847. Volume 1. Reprinted 1968.  Clark County.<br />
Artists of Kentucky, pages 625-626. <br />
<br />
     For half a century past, Henry Clay has been regarded in America, if<br />
not throughout the entire political world, as the greatest of American<br />
statesmen.  With like unanimity did the entire art world, in 1874, concede<br />
that JOEL T. HART was the greatest of sculptors, living or dead.  If such<br />
detrmination brings its own reward, then had he twice accomplished the<br />
purpose of his life.<br />
     Mr. Hart was born in Kentucky, in 1810, in Clark county.  His school<br />
life was but three months long; but his desire to learn was not easily<br />
limited, and of evenings he pored over books by the light of a wood fire. <br />
He earned his subsistence by rough stone-work, particularly in building<br />
chimneys and a few fences.  In 1830, or by one account as late as 1835, he<br />
removed to Lexington, and in a marble-yard made his first essay at<br />
engraving letters on a tombstone.  This was one advance towards imparting<br />
shape and expression to marble.  Little by little, as if working out an<br />
unknown problem, Hart seemed to gain upon that undeveloped idea that was<br />
moving him onward.  Just then he met with Shobal Vail Clevenger, of<br />
Cincinnati, a stonecutter like himself, whose first essay at sculpture was<br />
in carving an angel upon a tombstone.  Although two years younger than<br />
Hart, he had seen more of art, and was fast developing the quiet genius<br />
that even before his early death at sea in 1843, when only 32, gave him<br />
name and fame and promise of fortune.  He let a flood of light in upon the<br />
hopeful mind of young Hart, who thus saw the world with new eyes, as it<br />
had not appeared to him before.  He was no longer a mere stone-mason, but<br />
had bounded into the highest sphere of the mason's art; he was a sculptor.<br />
 He studied anatomy at the old Medical College in Lexington, as<br />
indispensable to statuary exactness.<br />
     His first effort in the line of his new profession was a bust of a<br />
young man of his own age, then fast rising into prominence, Cassius M.<br />
Clay.  This was true to life, and followed by busts of Andrew Jackson,<br />
John J. Crittenden, and Henry Clay, which gave him popular appreciation at<br />
once.  The &quot;Ladies' Clay Association,&quot; of Richmond, Va. in 1846,<br />
commissioned him to execute a statue of Henry Clay.  Upon the model of<br />
this he spent three years, studying from life; he knew it would bring him<br />
fame, and he admired the noble man.  He went to Florence, Italy, in the<br />
fall of 1849, to transfer his work to marble; for a year, waited for his<br />
model, only to learn that it had been shipwrecked in the Bay of Biscay.  A<br />
duplicate model at home was sent for.  Other delays occurred.  Years<br />
rolled on, and the great work - great in execution and in character - had<br />
its last touches.  It was shipped on Aug. 29, 1859, and set up in the<br />
capitol grounds at Richmond.  The city of New Orleans ordered a colossal<br />
bronze statue of Mr. Clay; and the beautiful marble statue of him which<br />
adorns the inner-rotunda of the court-house at Louisville was inaugurated<br />
May 30, 1867.<br />
     During these years, Mr. Hart was not idle.  The teeming imagery of<br />
his brain brought life and beauty from the chisel and cold marble.  The<br />
marble ceased to be cold, and glowed with warmth and feeling and<br />
intelligence.  He has executed many portrait-busts - among them those of<br />
Gen. Zachary Taylor, Col. Gregory, Robert Wickliffe, and duplicates of his<br />
previous busts - some of them remarkable for a look of flesh, truthful in<br />
expression, and seemingly almost inssinct [sic] with life.<br />
     But it is his ideal pieces which are most appreciated in the art<br />
world, and excite the most thrilling emotions of the beautiful.  His<br />
&quot;Angelina&quot; and &quot;Il Penseroso&quot; cause bursts of enthusiasm at the very<br />
sight.  Another, is a figure of a child examining a flower, while she<br />
holds, in her other hand, her apron full of flowers.  But poetry and<br />
sentiment and skill have combined in a master-piece that will live and be<br />
known, as only one modern piece is known - the &quot;Greek Slave&quot; of his<br />
celebrated compeer, Hiram Powers who had no petty jealousy to restrain him<br />
from saying that &quot;Hart is the best sculptor in the world.&quot;  In 1866, this<br />
piece ws called &quot;Woman Triumphant,&quot; but since has been better known as the<br />
&quot;Triumph of Chastity.&quot;  It is described, by a Kentuckian who saw in in<br />
1871, as &quot;a group of two figures only - a perfect woman and a charming<br />
cupid.  Love, in the shape of a bewitching cupid, has assailed the fair<br />
one - has shot arrow after arrow, all of which are broken, and have fallen<br />
at her feet.  His quiver is exhausted, the last shaft has failed of the<br />
mark, and this splendid woman has caught the barbed arrow, and with her<br />
left hand has raised it above her head out of reach of the villanious<br />
little tempter, who struggles hopelessly on tiptoe to regain it.<br />
     &quot;The composition tells its own story.  Virtue is assailed - reason is<br />
brought to bear, and all attacks are harmless.  It is, indeed, woman's<br />
triumph - the triumph of chastity.  Believing that his own countrywomen<br />
are unsurpassed for loveliness and power, he has endeavored, and<br />
successfully, to produce the highest, purest, and most captivating type of<br />
the American woman.<br />
     &quot;The art correspondent at Florence of the London Athenaeum - a paper<br />
of recognized authority in art matters - said, in 1871, that he considered<br />
it the finest work in existence; and that in 1868 he had begged Mr. Hart<br />
to finish it at once, but he would not; each year it grew more beautiful,<br />
and he now feared to urge its completion against the artist's better<br />
judgment.  Other art correspondents of London journals years ago<br />
pronounced it the work of modern times, and other writers all agree as to<br />
its perfection.&quot;<br />
     An art enthusiast has offered $15,000 for it, when completed in<br />
marble (it is now only in pure clay); but the old Kentucky sculptor<br />
thought, in 1874, he could yet add to to its beauty, although for nineteen<br />
long years he had toned and tempered and modeled it.  When chided by an<br />
admiring friend for spending so many years upon one group, he said, with<br />
an exalted faith in his art, &quot;The Almighty does not see fit to make a<br />
perfect woman in less than eighteen years, and can I hope to make a<br />
perfect model in less?&quot;<br />
     When he returned from Italy in 1860, for a year, the city of<br />
Lexington received him with becoming respect and honor, and other places<br />
showed him marked consideration.  When the legislature of Kentucky, on<br />
Jan. 23, 1860, appropriated $10,000 toward the completion of the Henry<br />
Clay monument at Lexington, it was understood that the statue was to be<br />
the handiwork of Mr. Hart.  But part of the appropriation was used to pay<br />
debts, and a stranger executed the statue.  The legislature, on Feb. 5,<br />
1874, appropriated $1,700 to purchase, from Mr. Hart's agent, busts of<br />
Henry Clay and Andrew Jackson, for the state-house at Frankfort.  It would<br />
redound to the good taste and honor of the State, if she would invite the<br />
now aged sculptor to execute busts or statues of Daniel Boone, Simon<br />
Kenton, George Rogers Clark, and Isaac Shelby, for four niches in the<br />
rotunda of the state-house.<br />
<br />
Clay Hart Vail_Clevenger Clay Jackson Crittenden Taylor Gregory Wickliffe<br />
Powers Boone Kenton Clark Shelby<br />
=<br />
Lexington-Fayette-KY OH VA Italy LA Louisville-Jefferson-KY England<br />
<br />
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            <dc:creator>MarthaCrossSargent</dc:creator>
            <category>Clark County Biographies</category>
            <pubDate>Fri, 16 Mar 2007 10:15:25 -0400</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <guid>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7441,7441#msg-7441</guid>
            <title>Haggard, Audley (no replies)</title>
            <link>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7441,7441#msg-7441</link>
            <description><![CDATA[ History of Kentucky, five volumes, edited by Judge Charles Kerr,<br />
American Historical Society, New York &amp; Chicago, 1922, Vol. V, p. 330,<br />
Clark County<br />
<br />
AUDLEY HAGGARD.  In Clark County members of the Haggard family have been<br />
prominent in agriculture and other affairs for several generations.  The<br />
home of Audley Haggard seven miles south of Winchester stands on the<br />
highest elevation in the county, with a wide range of view, the lights<br />
of the City of Richmond, county seat of Madison County, being within<br />
vision at night.  This farm was once owned by David Haggard, grandfather<br />
of Frank Haggard, the attorney.<br />
     Henry Rider Haggard, the distinguished English novelist (who claims<br />
&quot;kin&quot; with the Haggards of Clark County) is authority for the statement<br />
that the Haggard family are descended from Andrew Ogard of Denmark, who<br />
settled in County Norfolk, England, in the year 1433, was naturalized<br />
there, and was knighted by King Henry VII.  Though they have made no<br />
effort to trace the connection the Haggards of Clark County are<br />
certainly descended from this Sir Andrew Ogard, whose name was<br />
anglicized into Haggard.<br />
     So far as is known the first Haggard to come to America was James<br />
Haggard, who had been educated for the Episcopal ministry in England,<br />
and came to Norfolk, Virginia, in 1698, being then not yet twenty-one<br />
years old.  He taught school in Norfolk for years and eventually married<br />
one of his pupils, whose name has not descended.  They had four sons,<br />
Nathaniel, Edmund, Zachary and Gray.  It is only with Nathaniel that<br />
this sketch has to do.<br />
     Nathaniel Haggard was born November 21, 1723, and married Elizabeth<br />
Gentry.  They settled in Albemarle County, Virginia, and in 1788 they<br />
went to Kentucky, settling three miles south of where Winchester now<br />
stands and where George W. Haggard now lives, in the same house, which<br />
is undoubtedly the oldest building of any kind in the county.  Nathaniel<br />
Haggard died August 21, 1820, at the ripe age of ninety-seven years.  He<br />
raised a family of seven sons and three daughters.  All of his children<br />
were born in Virginia, and some of them never settled in Clark County. <br />
Those of them who did were : (1) John Haggard, born in 1754, married<br />
Mary Shepherd.  They settled about eight miles south of Winchester, and<br />
raised four sons and four daughters - Pleasant, who married a Miss<br />
Watts; Martin, who married Sallie Hampton; John, who married Rhoda<br />
Quisenberry, daughter of Rev. James Quisenberry; David T., who married<br />
Patsey Adams; Polly who married Minor Winn; Elizabeth, who married Joel<br />
Quisenberry, son of Rev. James Quisenberry; Sallie who married Jessie<br />
Hampton; and Nancy, who married David Reed.   David T. Haggard was the<br />
father of Judge Augustine I. Haggard and grandfather of Judge Rodney<br />
Haggard.  (2) Rev. James Haggard (Baptist minister) born 1759, married<br />
Betsey Gentry, in 1790 settled in Clark County, but in 1816 removed to<br />
Christian County, Kentucky.  (3) Bartlett Haggard, born in 1763 married<br />
Martha Dawson, and in 1788 they settled in Clark County, Kentucky.  They<br />
had two sons, Martin who married Elizabeth Dane, and Allen Dawson, who<br />
married Frances Haggard, daughter of Pleasant Haggard. (4) David<br />
Haggard, born in 1763, married Nancy Dawson, and in 1792 they settled in<br />
Clark County, Kentucky, but in 1823 they removed to Trigg County,<br />
Kentucky, and in 1836 to Bloomington, Illinois.  Their daughter, Martha<br />
Haggard, was born in Clark County in 1795, and married John Routt, of<br />
the same county, and they went to Illinois.  Their son, John L. Routt,<br />
was several times governor of Colorado.  Bartlett and David Haggard were<br />
twins and married sisters (5) Nathan Haggard great-grandfather of Audley<br />
Haggard born in 1765, married Elizabeth Hayes, and they settled in Clark<br />
County in 1788.  They had four sons and three daughters, as follows:<br />
Martin, William, John, David, Polly (who married Spencer Holloway),<br />
Nancy (who married James Hanson) and Eliza (who married Dennis Doyle.)<br />
     This family were all Baptists and most of them were members of<br />
Providence Church at &quot;the old stone meeting house.&quot;<br />
     At one time there were three David Haggards in Clark County, all<br />
first cousins.  One of them was David, the grandfather of Audley<br />
Haggard.  He was born July 28, 1812, and died December 14, 1880.  His<br />
home was three miles southwest of Winchester, at the present Jeff Tevis<br />
farm, and he spent his last days there and was buried at Smithfield. <br />
His wife was Temperance Hodgkin, born December 28, 1811, and died April<br />
28, 1883.  Of David and Temperance Haggard the children were: James P.,<br />
who [is] in Shelby County; Samuel of Arkansas; Charles P. of Winchester;<br />
Mildred, a twin sister of Charles P., who married Doctor Morris and<br />
lived at Sulphur, Kentucky; Betty, who died in Henry County, the wife of<br />
Paschal Maddox; and Barbara, who married John Austin and is deceased.<br />
     Charles P. Haggard, father of Audley Haggard, married for his first<br />
wife, Edith Elkin, daughter of Enoch and Ann Polly (Quisenberry) Elkin. <br />
Her mother was a daughter of Roger Quisenberry, who was born November<br />
23, 1792, and died March 29, 1877, while his wife, Polly, was born<br />
October 10, 1795, and died January 30, 1866.  The old home of Enoch<br />
Elkin is now owned by Joe Carroll of the Boonesboro Pike.  A brother of<br />
Edith Elkin was Doctor Elkin, who died at Louisville.  None of the<br />
Elkins remain in Clark County.  Enoch Elkin, born January 30, 1803, died<br />
at the age of sixty-one, on July 12, 1864.  His first wife Ann P.<br />
Quisenberry, was born April 24, 1814, and died January 8, 1878.  They<br />
were married February 17, 1831.  The Elkins were one of the very wealthy<br />
families of the county, and Enoch Elkin was a prominent dealer in mules<br />
for many years.  Edith Elkin died four years after her marriage, leaving<br />
two sons, Audley and Morris.  The latter is a farmer and merchant at<br />
Somerset, Kentucky.  Both these sons were reared by their stepmother,<br />
who was one of the very best of women and a real mother to them. <br />
Charles P. Haggard soon after his marriage moved to Monroe County,<br />
Missouri, where his wife died.  He then returned and became a partner of<br />
Sam P. Hodgkin.  About 1902 he<br />
bought the farm now owned by his son Audley.  This farm had been given<br />
by another David Haggard to his daughter Frankie, who married Nathan<br />
Lipscomb.  Mrs. Lipscomb's daughter, Nannie May Lispscomb, became the<br />
second wife of Charles P. Haggard.  At the death of Mrs. Lipscomb the<br />
farm was sold to Charles P. Haggard, his wife having an interest in it. <br />
After three years of residence on the farm Charles P. Haggard moved to<br />
Winchester, where his wife died the same year.  At that time Charles<br />
bought out the grocery business of his son Morris at Winchester, and is<br />
still one of the active merchants of that city.<br />
     Audley Haggard's chief farm comprises a splendid property in the<br />
Blue Grass section, and he also owns a half interest in the adjoining<br />
farm.<br />
     On November 14, 1906, Audley Haggard married Sudie Ecton, a<br />
daughter of Woody and Mollie (Allan) Ecton.  The children of Audley<br />
Haggard and wife are Morris Allan, Marion Elkin and Audley, Jr.  Mr.<br />
Haggard is an active member and a deacon of the Mount Olive Baptist<br />
Church.<br />
<br />
Adams Allen Austin Dawson Carroll Dane Doyle Ecton Gentry Haggard Hampton <br />
Hanson Hayes Hodgkin Holloway Lipscomb Maddox Morris Ogard Reed Routt <br />
Quisenberry Shepherd Watts Winn<br />
= <br />
CO Denmark Norfolk-England IL Trigg-KY Shelby-KY Albemarle-VA Monroe-MO<br />
<br />
[<a href="http://www.rootsweb.com/~kygenweb/kybiog/clark/haggard.a.txt"  rel="nofollow">www.rootsweb.com</a>]]]></description>
            <dc:creator>MarthaCrossSargent</dc:creator>
            <category>Clark County Biographies</category>
            <pubDate>Fri, 16 Mar 2007 10:14:23 -0400</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <guid>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7440,7440#msg-7440</guid>
            <title>Fryer, Louis P. (no replies)</title>
            <link>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7440,7440#msg-7440</link>
            <description><![CDATA[ History of Kentucky, five volumes, edited by Judge Charles Kerr,<br />
American Historical Society, New York &amp; Chicago, 1922, Vol. 5, p.221,<br />
Clark County<br />
<br />
     LOUIS P. FRYER, of Butler, is rounding out eighteen years of<br />
consecutive years of consecutive service as judge of the Eighteenth<br />
Judicial District.  He has practiced law in Pendleton County thirty-six<br />
years, and his abilities as a lawyer and his worth as a citizens have<br />
brought him repeated honors in public affairs, so that his official<br />
service has been almost continuous with his law practice.<br />
     Judge Fryer was born near Butler January 10, 1864, and four<br />
generations of the family have lived in that community.  His<br />
great-grandfather was a native of Scotland and was the founder of the<br />
family in Pendleton County, where he lived the life of a farmer. <br />
William Fryer, grandfather of Judge Fryer, spent all his life in the<br />
vicinity of Butler, and was likewise identified with agricultural<br />
pursuits.  John H. Fryer, father of Judge Fryer, was born near Butler in<br />
1832, and after his marriage for twenty years lived at Falmouth, where<br />
he earned a high reputation as a lawyer.  He was a graduate of the law<br />
department of the University of Michigan.  From Falmouth he returned to<br />
Butler, and lived on his farm there until his death in 1904.  Originally<br />
he was a democrat, but in later years affiliated with the republican<br />
party.  He was a very active member of the Methodist Episcopal Church. <br />
John H.  Fryer married Frances Norris, who lived all her life in<br />
Pendleton County and was born and died near Butler.  Of their children<br />
Calvin, the oldest, is a farmer near Butler; Laura, living on her farm<br />
near Butler, is the widow of Lafayette McClung, a printer for many years<br />
and later a farmer; Louis P. was the third among the children; Alvin<br />
died at the age of fifteen, and two others died in infancy.<br />
     Louis P. Fryer attended the public schools of Falmouth and Butler,<br />
graduated from the Falmouth Academy in 1883, and pursued his law studies<br />
in his father's office until his admission to the bar in 1885. Judge<br />
Fryer kept his offices as an attorney at Falmouth from his admission to<br />
the bar until January, 1904.  He was admitted to the bar when twenty-one<br />
years of age, and about that time was chosen police judge of Falmouth,<br />
serving three terms.  He was county attorney one term and commonwealth<br />
attorney from 1897 to 1903.  The valuable services he rendered in these<br />
offices was an important factor in his elevation to the bench.  Judge<br />
Fryer began his first six year term as judge of the Eighteenth Judicial<br />
District in January, 1904.  He was re-elected in 1909 and agin in 1915. <br />
This judicial district comprises the counties of Pendleton, Harrison,<br />
Nicholas and Robertson.  Judge Fryer has his offices and home in a very<br />
beautiful residence just out of the corporate limits of Butler.  The<br />
house stands on an elevation and is surrounded by large and well kept<br />
grounds.<br />
     Judge Fryer is a democrat in politics, a member of the Christian<br />
Church, and is affiliated with the Odd Fellows, Knights of Pythias, and<br />
a member of the Kentucky State Bar Association.  He gave an active and<br />
helpful influence to the promotion of the success of all war drives in<br />
Pendleton County.  In July, 1918, at Lexington, Judge Fryer married Miss<br />
Eva Bradford, a native of Cincinnati.  Alvin died at the age of fifteen,<br />
and two others died in infancy.<br />
<br />
Bradford Fryer McClung Norris<br />
<br />
OH Scotland<br />
<br />
[<a href="http://www.rootsweb.com/~kygenweb/kybiog/clark/fryer.lp.txt"  rel="nofollow">www.rootsweb.com</a>]]]></description>
            <dc:creator>MarthaCrossSargent</dc:creator>
            <category>Clark County Biographies</category>
            <pubDate>Fri, 16 Mar 2007 10:13:33 -0400</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <guid>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7439,7439#msg-7439</guid>
            <title>Dietrich, Charles H. (no replies)</title>
            <link>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7439,7439#msg-7439</link>
            <description><![CDATA[ HISTORY OF KENTUCKY AND KENTUCKIANS, E. Polk Johnson, three volumes, Lewis<br />
Publishing Co., New York &amp; Chicago, 1912. Common version, <br />
Vol. III, p. 1281.   [Clark County]<br />
<br />
CHARLES H. DIETRICH--The subject of this sketch, now a citizen of<br />
Winchester, Kentucky, is a native of the Buckeye state, having been born<br />
in Fredericksburg, Wayne county, Ohio, September 19, 1849. His parents were<br />
John J. N. Dietrich and Elizabeth (Boyer) Dietrich, both of whom were born<br />
near Gettysburg, Pennsylvania.  His grandfather, Jacob Dietrich, was a<br />
soldier in the American army in the war of the Revolution.  His<br />
great-grandfather, a native of Germany, emigrated to America between 1745<br />
and 1750 and settled in Lancaster county, Pennsylvania.  Mr. Dietrich's<br />
father was a woollen manufacturer, a business which he followed for many<br />
years, both in Pennsylvania and in Ohio, to which state he returned about<br />
the year 1837.<br />
     Charles H. Dietrich was reared in Wayne county, attending the schools<br />
of his native town and later those of Defiance, Ohio, to which city his<br />
parents removed their home in their later years.  Upon the organization in<br />
1873 of the Ohio State University, of Columbus, Ohio, he entered it as a<br />
student and graduated in 1878, in the first class of that now famous<br />
institution.  He had been engaged in teaching before he entered college and<br />
resumed that work soon after his graduation.  His health failing he joined<br />
a party of prospectors in the winter of 1880 and went to New Mexico, where<br />
he worked as a United States mineral surveyor until the close of the year<br />
when he was engaged by the city school board of Hopkinsville, Kentucky, to<br />
organize and supervise the graded schools of that city.  He entered upon<br />
the work at once and continued in charge of the schools until June, 1895,<br />
when he resigned to enter the service of the American Book Company, as<br />
their representative in central and eastern Kentucky and this position he<br />
still holds.  Mr. Dietrich has for many years been connected with the<br />
Masonic fraternity in Lodge, Chapter, and Commandery, and has been honored<br />
by the order by election to office frequently.<br />
     Mr. Dietrich acknowledged the worth and charm of Kentucky's daughters<br />
by marrying one of them--Miss Minnie R. Lander, daughter of Wilson J.<br />
Lander, of Hopkinsville.  She became his wife November 28, 1883.  She has<br />
made his home the ideal &quot;Old Kentucky Home.&quot;  They have been blessed with<br />
five children, Karl, Ruth, Lois, Aime, and Neil; and theirs have been<br />
busy and useful lives such as lead to the establishment and maintenance<br />
of American life and the American nation.<br />
<br />
Dietrich Boyer Lander<br />
=<br />
Hopkinsville-Christian-KY Fredericksburg-Wayne-OH Lancaster-PA<br />
NM Germany<br />
<br />
[<a href="http://www.rootsweb.com/~kygenweb/kybiog/clark/dietrich.ch.txt"  rel="nofollow">www.rootsweb.com</a>]]]></description>
            <dc:creator>MarthaCrossSargent</dc:creator>
            <category>Clark County Biographies</category>
            <pubDate>Fri, 16 Mar 2007 10:12:49 -0400</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <guid>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7438,7438#msg-7438</guid>
            <title>Dean, Jeremiah E. (no replies)</title>
            <link>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7438,7438#msg-7438</link>
            <description><![CDATA[ History of Lawrence, Orange and Washington Counties, Indiana From the<br />
Earliest Time to the Present; Together with Interesting Biographical<br />
Sketches, Reminiscences, Notes, Etc. Chicago, Goodspeed Bros. &amp; Co.<br />
Publishers, 1884. Weston A. Goodspeed, Leroy C. Goodspeed, Charles L.<br />
Goodspeed. Clark County.<br />
<br />
CAPT. JEREMIAH E. DEAN, a veteran of the Mexican and late Civil wars, was<br />
born in Clark County, Ky., October 25, 1821 and is one of five children<br />
born to James and Mary (Campbell) Dean.  When a small lad he went to<br />
Marion County, Indiana, making that his home until about fourteen years<br />
old, when he moved to Orange County, Indiana to live with an uncle.  Until<br />
attaining his majority he worked on a farm, then worked two years in a<br />
grist mill at Lawrenceport, Lawrence Co., Ind., after which he moved to<br />
Bedford.  May 7, 1847, he enlisted in Company I, Sixteenth Regiment of of<br />
the United States Infantry, served in the Mexican War until he was<br />
honorably discharged at Newport, KY., July 28, 1848. May 24, 1849, Mary A.<br />
Owens became his wife, shortly after which he moved to Springville, Ind.,<br />
where for over twenty years he was engaged in blacksmithing.  June 7,<br />
1861, he enlisted in Company F, Fifteenth Indiana Volunteers, a position<br />
he held until after the battle of Stone River, when he was advanced to the<br />
Captaincy of his company.  Besides various skirmishes in which he was<br />
engaged he was an active participant in the battles of Shiloh, Stone<br />
River, Chickamauga and Mission Ridge.  Mr. Dean is a member of the Blue<br />
Lodge in Masonry, is a Republican in politics, and in 1876 was elected<br />
Auditor of Lawrence County, serving as such four years.  He is at present<br />
engaged in the hardware trade.  Both Mr. and Mrs. Dean are members of the<br />
Methodist Episcopal Church, and the following named of their ten children<br />
are yet living:  Samuel M., Sarach C., D. J., Amanda L., Harriet C. and<br />
Jeremiah H.<br />
<br />
Dean Campbell<br />
=<br />
Marion-IN Lawrenceport-Lawrence-IN Campbell-KY<br />
<br />
[<a href="http://www.rootsweb.com/~kygenweb/kybiog/clark/dean.je.txt"  rel="nofollow">www.rootsweb.com</a>]]]></description>
            <dc:creator>MarthaCrossSargent</dc:creator>
            <category>Clark County Biographies</category>
            <pubDate>Fri, 16 Mar 2007 10:11:54 -0400</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <guid>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7437,7437#msg-7437</guid>
            <title>Day, John C. Mason (no replies)</title>
            <link>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7437,7437#msg-7437</link>
            <description><![CDATA[ HISTORY OF KENTUCKY AND KENTUCKIANS, E. Polk Johnson, three volumes, Lewis<br />
Publishing Co., New York &amp; Chicago, 1912. Common version, <br />
Vol. III, pp. 1291-92.   [Clark County]<br />
<br />
JOHN C. MASON DAY is well known in business circles throughout the state<br />
for succeeding in all of his undertakings.  He and his brothers inherited<br />
large tracts of timber land, but instead of becoming what is known as<br />
&quot;land poor&quot; as so many who did the same have become, Mr. Day has emerged a<br />
wealthy and influential citizen.  The business methods by which he has done<br />
this can not fail to interest the commercial world.<br />
     Mr. Day was born June 3, 1859, the son of William Day, who was born in<br />
Morgan county, Kentucky, August 21, 1821, and who died in Breathitt county,<br />
January 28, 1884; the mother of our subject, Phoebe Elleanor Gibbs, was<br />
born in Breathitt county, January 30, 1825, and died June 11, 1862.  The<br />
grandfather was Jesse Day, born at New River, Virginia, January 13, 1802,<br />
and he died in Morgan county, Kentucky, April 21, 1883.  His wife, Margaret<br />
Caskey, was born in Morgan county, Kentucky, May 11, 1802, and died in the<br />
same county in 1884.  The Caskeys were of Huguenot origin.  They came to<br />
Kentucky from New York in wagons, settling first on Flat Creek, near Mt.<br />
Sterling, in Montgomery county, but moving shortly afterward to Morgan<br />
county, where they located on the Licking river one and one-half miles from<br />
West Liberty.  The first of the name in Kentucky had run away from his<br />
uncle John to whom he was apprenticed in New York, and tried to join the<br />
Revolutionary army when only twelve years old, but was promptly returned to<br />
his proud but worried uncle.<br />
     When Washington was first inaugurated Margaret Caskey's mother took<br />
part in the celebration as a flower girl.  She and her mother called on<br />
Lady Washington.  Owing to the straitened times existing after the<br />
Revolution, they had little finery in which to adorn themselves, and when<br />
telling about it years after, would never fail to describe the pride which<br />
prompted, and the difficulty which met her mother in her efforts to make up<br />
their homemade silk dresses so as to make a worthy appearance.  Another<br />
point in the story, as she was accustomed to tell it, was that when they<br />
were ushered into the august presence of the first lady of the land, she<br />
was quietly knitting in the corner by the fire-place and continued to knit<br />
during the whole of the call.  They brought with them over the mountains<br />
china and utensils rarely found in the back woods at that time, some of<br />
which are still preserved with pride by the family, our subject owning a<br />
beautiful old fashioned teapot.<br />
     Mr. Day's great-grandfather, John Day, was born June 28, 1760, in<br />
Lunenburg county, Virginia, and died on July 16, 1837, in Morgan county,<br />
Kentucky.  He served throughout the Revolution, enlisting first in October,<br />
1776, when only sixteen years of age, and being mustered out for the last<br />
time in September, 1781.  He served under Colonels Joseph Cloyd, William<br />
Preston and others and took part in a number of engagements with the<br />
British and Torys in his section.  The last three years he served as spy<br />
or Indian ranger, which speaks well for the woodcraft and discretion<br />
possessed by a boy of nineteen.  Before the Revolution his family suffered,<br />
on one of the inroads of the Shawnee Indians, a terrible massacre, several<br />
of them being killed or captured.  This made such an impression that the<br />
story has been handed down to the present day generation.  The wife of this<br />
Revolutionary hero, named Rebecca Howe, was a woman of great force of<br />
character.  She was born October 11, 1765, in Pennsylvania, and died March<br />
17, 1856, while a resident of Morgan county, Kentucky.<br />
     Our subject's maternal grandfather was Nathan Gibbs, born October 12,<br />
1793, in Burke county, North Carolina, and died November 12, 1882.  His<br />
wife was Jane Lipps, born August 14, 1797, and died April 24, 1867.  John<br />
Gibbs, the father of Nathan, was born in South Carolina March 3, 1755, and<br />
died March 15, 1847, a resident of Breathitt county, Kentucky. While living<br />
in Burke county, North Carolina, in 1780, he enlisted in the Revolution and<br />
served three months under Capt. Clark; and in 1781 he was again called out<br />
and served several months under Capt. John Couley.  John Gibbs was a member<br />
of the Legislature of North Carolina during the Revolutionary war and came<br />
to Kentucky over the Cumberland Gap road bringing his household effects on<br />
pack horses.  His wife, Hannah Muchmore, was a cousin of Daniel Boone, and<br />
was born February 8, 1757, and died March 17, 1850.<br />
     All of Mr. Day's ancestors above noted were farmers and leading men in<br />
their time and section.  William, his father, was reared on a farm in<br />
Morgan county, and educated at private schools.  He married on the 18th of<br />
June, 1844, and bought land, most of which was virgin forest.  Here he<br />
lived and followed farming until his death, at which time he owned ten<br />
thousand acres of timber land.  In 1859 he was elected to the legislature<br />
of his state on the Democratic ticket and served one term.  He did not<br />
enlist in the war but kept horses and pilots on his place and would send<br />
parties who wished to get through to join the Confederate army safely<br />
across the mountains into Virginia and Tennessee, where they could achieve<br />
their purposes.<br />
     Mr. Day was a merchant also and his store and firm was destroyed and<br />
robbed several times by Northern troops and sympathizers, on which account<br />
he was obliged to leave the country and did not dare return until 1866,<br />
after the war was ended.  He was successful in whatever he undertook,<br />
farming, stock-raising, merchandising, and lumbering.  He had nine<br />
children: Nathan B., J. Taylor, Margaret, Nancy Jane, Lucinda Caroline,<br />
Mary Elizabeth, Floyd, John C.M., and William.  J. Taylor, FLoyd, John<br />
C.M., and William are living.  On April 16, 1863, William Day married for<br />
the second time, Lourana Cope, the daughter of James D. Cope, and left<br />
one child, Lewella, the wife of James Hargis of Jackson, Kentucky.<br />
     John C. M. Day was reared in Breathitt county, and received his early<br />
education in the common schools and later attended the Cumberland College<br />
in Virginia.  Upon reaching his majority he entered his father's store<br />
for four years, at the end of which time he sold out and went to Jackson,<br />
the county seat, and started the firm of Day Bros. &amp; Co., a general<br />
merchandise store in which he and his brother Floyd are still interested,<br />
and in which they have build up a business of two hundred and fifty<br />
thousand dollars a year.  Mr. Day and his brother Floyd own three lumber<br />
mills, one in Breathitt county, one at Clay City, and one at Beattyville.<br />
They also own ten thousand acres of timber, coal and farm lands.  They<br />
have built twelve miles of railroad from Natural Bridge to Campton,<br />
Kentucky, through some of the roughest country in the world, and will<br />
extend it soon to Hazel Green, Kentucky; this is the Mountain Central<br />
Railroad of which Mr. Day is vice president and general manager.  On<br />
January 1, 1899, he started the wholesale grocery firm of White &amp; Day in<br />
Winchester, Kentucky, eighteen months later he bought out White then bought<br />
out Pearson &amp; Clark, wholesale grocers of Lexington, Kentucky, moved his<br />
Winchester stock to Lexington, combined the two stores and later sold his<br />
interest to W. J. Goodwin of Bryan, Goodwin &amp; Hunt.<br />
     Mr. Day married on January 30, 1887, Margaret McLin, who was born at<br />
Rose Hill, Virginia, November 22, 1865.  She was the daughter of Capt. John<br />
Blair and Mary (Bales) McLin.  Capt. McLin was born at Jonesboro,<br />
Tennessee, May 1, 1833, and died July 14, 1910, in Virginia.  He enlisted<br />
in Captain Tip Willet's Company in the 19th Tennessee Infantry in the Civil<br />
war and became captain before its close.  He married on December 15, 1864,<br />
Mary E. Bales, who was born in Lee county, Virginia, a daughter of R. M.<br />
Bales, who is one of the best families of this section, and she survives<br />
him, residing at Rose Hill, Virginia.  Capt. McLin was a ruling elder in<br />
Mt. Carmel Presbyterian church for years and superintendent of the Sunday<br />
school for twenty-five years.  His early life was spent at Jonesboro,<br />
Tennessee, as a clerk in a store, and at the close of the war he became a<br />
merchant and farmer, in which occupations he spent the remainder of his<br />
life.  In 1883-84 he served a term in the Virginia Legislature.<br />
     To Mr. and Mrs. John C. M. Day have been born four children, William,<br />
Mary Eleanor, Kelly, and Catherine, all still young enough to remain at<br />
home.  They own a beautiful home in Winchester, where they are highly<br />
respected by all who know them.  Mr. Day has been fortunate in always<br />
being able to secure the esteem and admiration of his numerous employees.<br />
He is recognized as one of the leading spirits in commercial and business<br />
circles but is never so busy that he can not grant to those who seek him<br />
the courtesy of an interview.  Success in business has not changed his<br />
kindly nature but made him a broad minded man of kindly spirit and genial<br />
temperament.  He and his wife are members of the Presbyterian church, of<br />
which he is also a ruling elder.<br />
     Mr. Day is the proud owner of a fine collection of guns and hunting<br />
implements, and one of his chief delights is to run away from business<br />
worries once each year to the wild woods, where for a few weeks he follows<br />
the delights of hunting, the love of which has been bred into him by a<br />
long line of ancestors skilled in the craft.<br />
<br />
Day Gibbs Caskey Howe Lipps Muchmore Cope Hargis McLin Bales Boone<br />
=<br />
Morgan-KY Breathitt-KY Mt._Sterling-Montgomery-KY Lunenburg-VA Lee-VA<br />
Jonesboro-Washington-TN Burke-NC SC NY<br />
<br />
[<a href="http://www.rootsweb.com/~kygenweb/kybiog/clark/day.jcm.txt"  rel="nofollow">www.rootsweb.com</a>]]]></description>
            <dc:creator>MarthaCrossSargent</dc:creator>
            <category>Clark County Biographies</category>
            <pubDate>Fri, 16 Mar 2007 10:11:12 -0400</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <guid>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7436,7436#msg-7436</guid>
            <title>Crutcher, Benjamin A. (no replies)</title>
            <link>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7436,7436#msg-7436</link>
            <description><![CDATA[ HISTORY OF KENTUCKY AND KENTUCKIANS, E. Polk Johnson, three volumes, Lewis<br />
Publishing Co., New York &amp; Chicago, 1912. Common version, <br />
Vol. III, pp. 1267-68.  [Full page photograph of Mr. Crutcher included with<br />
bio.]<br />
[Clark County]<br />
<br />
BENJAMIN A. CRUTCHER, who in the general practice of law has built up an<br />
extensive patronage indicative of his comprehensive knowledge of the<br />
principles of jurisprudence and his correct adaptation thereof to the<br />
points in litigation, has been numbered among the members of the bar since<br />
1884. He is at present commonwealth attorney, residing in Winchester,<br />
Kentucky.<br />
     Mr. Crutcher was born in Jessamine county, Kentucky, June 21, 1856,<br />
the son of Thomas B. and Sarah (Price) Crutcher.  His father was born in<br />
Jefferson county, Kentucky, February 14, 1831, and died in Jessamine<br />
county, Kentucky, at the age of seventy-two years.  His mother was born at<br />
Bardstown, Nelson county, Kentucky, February 21, 1831 and is still living<br />
at Nicholasville, Kentucky.  They were the parents of seven children,<br />
of whom six are living: John A., living in Louisville, Kentucky; Benjamin<br />
A.; Lizzie, in Nicholasville; Sallie, deceased; Carrie, Thomas B. and<br />
Fannie, the last three living in Nicholasville.  Our subject's grandfather,<br />
Norvill Crutcher, and his wife, Sarah (Pollock) Crutcher, were natives<br />
of Virginia and of Welsh descent.  They came to Jessamine county, Kentucky,<br />
when our subject's father was a boy, having previously lived in Jefferson<br />
county.  Thomas B. Crutcher, the father, was given a common school<br />
education and for fifty years he was in the mercantile business in<br />
Nicholasville.  He was police judge and served on the city council for a<br />
number of years and was an active member of the Baptist church. He took a<br />
great interest in educational work and was president of the Jessamine<br />
Female Institute and promoted Bethel Academy and family combined the two<br />
schools into one.<br />
     Mr. Benjamin A. Crutcher was reared in Nicholasville, Kentucky, where<br />
he began his education by attending the common and graded schools, and<br />
continued by his taking a literary course at William Jewell College, at<br />
Liberty, Ohio, from which he returned home.  While working in his father's<br />
store, he read law and was admitted to the bar in 1884, and immediately<br />
began the practice of his profession.  Mr. Crutcher was elected county<br />
attorney and served one term, then was re-elected and served until he was<br />
elected commonwealth attorney in 1892, when he resigned the office of the<br />
county attorney.  At the first election he had some opposition, but since<br />
then he has had none, and as he is serving his fourth term, the completion<br />
of the present one will make twenty-four years in all.  In 1907 Mr.<br />
Crutcher removed to Clark county and purchased a farm of one hundred and<br />
fifty acres on the Paris Pike, where he resided until the spring of 1910,<br />
when he removed to Winchester.  His district is composed of Clark,<br />
Jessamine, Madison and Powell counties.<br />
     Mr. Crutcher married, in 1879, Cora Ogden, a native of Winchester,<br />
Kentucky, who died in 1889 at the age of thirty years.  She was a daughter<br />
of James and Mary (Baldwin) Ogden.  Three children were born of this<br />
union: Mary, at home; James O., of Winchester; and Allan, at home.  Mr.<br />
Crutcher's second marriage occurred on November 24, 1892, to Emma Hedges,<br />
who was born in Circleville, Ohio, December 12, 1858, a daughter of<br />
Joshua Hedges, of Pickaway county, Ohio.  One child has been born to this<br />
union, William, who is at home.  Mr. Crutcher is a member of the fraternal<br />
orders of Masons, Odd Fellows and the Knights of Pythias, being connected<br />
with these orders in Nicholasville and with the Elks in Winchester.  He<br />
and his family are members of the Methodist Episcopal church South.  Mr.<br />
Crutcher in politics has been a life-long Democrat, and, keeping well<br />
informed on the questions and issues of the day, is able to support his<br />
position by intelligent argument.  He takes an active interest in<br />
community affairs and has been influential in the ranks of his party,<br />
doing all in his power to promote its growth and secure its success. His<br />
is a well rounded character, in which the varied interests of citizenship,<br />
of professional service, home and social life have received due attention.<br />
He is a well read man, has a host of friends, and is all relations he has<br />
commanded the esteem of those with whom he has come in contact, while the<br />
community interests have benefited by his co-operation and practical labor.<br />
<br />
Crutcher Price Pollock Ogden Baldwin Hedges<br />
=<br />
Jessamine-KY Bardstown-Nelson-KY Louisville-Jefferson-KY<br />
Circleville-Pickaway-OH VA<br />
<br />
[<a href="http://www.rootsweb.com/~kygenweb/kybiog/clark/crutcher.ba.txt"  rel="nofollow">www.rootsweb.com</a>]]]></description>
            <dc:creator>MarthaCrossSargent</dc:creator>
            <category>Clark County Biographies</category>
            <pubDate>Fri, 16 Mar 2007 10:10:18 -0400</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <guid>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7435,7435#msg-7435</guid>
            <title>Clarke, James (no replies)</title>
            <link>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7435,7435#msg-7435</link>
            <description><![CDATA[ HISTORY OF KENTUCKY, by Lewis Collins, and J.A. &amp; U.P. James, published <br />
1847.  Reprinted by Henry Clay Press, Lexington, Ky., 1968, pp. 235-236 <br />
[Clark county].<br />
<br />
Among the most distinguished citizens of Clark county was the Hon. JAMES <br />
CLARKE, late governor of the commonwealth. Our materials for a sketch of <br />
his life are exceedingly meagre [sic], and we can attempt nothing more <br />
than a bare ennumeration of the most prominent incidents in his career.  <br />
He was the son of Robert and Susan Clarke, and was born in 1779, in <br />
Bedford county, Virginia, near the celebrated Peaks of Otter.  His <br />
father emigrated from Virginia to Kentucky at a very early period, and <br />
settled in Clark county, near the Kentucky river.  The subject of this <br />
notice received the principal part of his education under Dr. Blythe, <br />
afterwards a professor in Transylvania university.  He studied law with <br />
his brother, Christian Clarke, a very distinguished lawyer of Virginia.  <br />
When he had qualifed himself to discharge the duties of his profession, <br />
he returned to Kentucky, and commenced the practice of the law in <br />
Winchester, in 1797.  <br />
	He remained here, however, but a short time, before he set out in <br />
search of a more eligible situation, and traveled through what was then <br />
the far west, taking Vincennes and St. Louis in his route; but failing <br />
to find a place to suit his views, he returned to Winchester, where, by <br />
his unremitting attention to business, and striking displays of <br />
professional ability, he soon obtained an extensive and lucrative <br />
practice.<br />
	At this period of his life, he was several times elected a member <br />
of the State legislature, in which body he soon attained a high and <br />
influential position.  In 1810, he was appointed a judge of the court of <br />
appeals, and acted in that capacity for about two years.  In 1812, he <br />
was elected to congress, and served from the 4th of March, 1814, until <br />
March, 1816.  In 1817 he received an appointment as judge of the circuit <br />
court, for the judicial district in which he resided, which station he <br />
filled with great ability, and to the general satisfaction of the <br />
public, till the year 1824, when he resigned.  During his term of <br />
service as judge, occurred that great and exciting struggle betwen the <br />
relief and anti-relief parties, which has left its traces on the <br />
political and social condition of Kentucky, in deep and indelible <br />
characters, to be seen even at the present day. In May, 1823, Mr. Clarke <br />
rendered an opinion in the Bourbon circuit court, in which he decided <br />
that the relief laws were unconstitutional.  This decision produced <br />
great excitement, and was the cause of his being arraigned and impeached <br />
before the legislature.  But, notwithstanding the temporary <br />
dissatisfaction it excited in the breasts of the relief party, there was <br />
probably no act of his life which inspired his fellow citizens with <br />
greater confidence in his integrity, firmness, independence, and <br />
patriotism, than this decision.  It was given just before the election, <br />
and he must have forseen a temporary injury it would inflict upon the <br />
party with which he acted, and which he regarded as the bulwark of the <br />
constitution.  But his was a nature which knew not the possibility of <br />
making a compromise between his principles and policy.<br />
	In 1825, he was elected to congress to fill the vacancy occasioned <br />
by Mr. Clay's appointment as secretary of state, and continued to <br />
represent the Fayette district in that body until 1831.  In 1832, he was <br />
elected to the senate of Kentucky, and was chosen speaker in the place <br />
of Mr. Morehead, who was then acting as governor, in the place of <br />
Governor Breathitt, deceased.  He was elected governor of Kentucky, in <br />
August, 1836, and died on the 27th of August, 1839, in his sixtieth <br />
year.<br />
	Governor Clarke was endowed by nature with great strength of mind, <br />
and a fine vein of original wit.  His literary attainments were <br />
respectable, ranking in that respect with most of his contemporaries of <br />
the legal profession at that day.  A fine person, a cheerful and social <br />
disposition, an easy address, and fascinating manners, made him the life <br />
of every circle in which he mingled.  He was full of fun, fond of <br />
anectdotes, and could tell a story with imimitable grace.  To these <br />
qualities, so well calculated to display the amiable traits of his <br />
character in their most attractive light, he added all those stern and <br />
manly virtues which inspire confidence and command respect.  His death <br />
made a vacancy in the political and social circles of Kentucky, which <br />
was very sensibly felt and universally deplored.<br />
<br />
Clarke Blythe Clay Morehead Breathitt<br />
=<br />
Bedford-VA IN St._Louis-St._Louis-MO Bourbon-KY Fayette-KY<br />
<br />
[<a href="http://www.rootsweb.com/~kygenweb/kybiog/clark/clarke.j.txt"  rel="nofollow">www.rootsweb.com</a>]]]></description>
            <dc:creator>MarthaCrossSargent</dc:creator>
            <category>Clark County Biographies</category>
            <pubDate>Fri, 16 Mar 2007 10:09:16 -0400</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <guid>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7434,7434#msg-7434</guid>
            <title>Clark, James (no replies)</title>
            <link>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7434,7434#msg-7434</link>
            <description><![CDATA[ Lawyers and Lawmakers of Kentucky, by H. Levin, editor, 1897. Published<br />
by Lewis Publishing Company, Chicago.  Reprinted by Southern Historical<br />
Press.  p. 68.  Clark County.<br />
<br />
JAMES CLARK, one of the judges of the court of appeals and governor of<br />
Kentucky, was born near the Peaks of Otter, in Virginia, in 1779.  His<br />
father emigrated to Kentucky and settled near Kentucky river, in Clark<br />
county.  He was educated under the supervision of Dr. Blythe, afterward<br />
a professor in Transylvania University, studied law with his brother,<br />
Christian Clark, a distinguished lawyer of Virginia, and returned to<br />
practice at Winchester, Kentucky, in 1797.  He was a member of the<br />
legislature in 1807 and 1808, and was appointed judge of the court of<br />
appeals March 29, 1810, but resigned after two years' service.  He was<br />
elected to congress from his district, serving from 1813 to 1816, when he<br />
resigned to accept the office of circuit judge, and while serving in this<br />
position in 1822 his decision in the case of Williams versus Blair,<br />
wherein he declared certain laws intended as stay laws for the benefit<br />
of debtors to be unconstitutional, caused such dissatisfaction as to<br />
call forth from the legislature, convened in extra session, a resolution<br />
of condemnation.  The committee appointed to inquire into the decision of<br />
the judge, on the 21st of May, 1822, reported as follows: &quot;The principles<br />
and doctrines assumed in this opinion are incompatible with the<br />
constitutional powers of the legislative department of the government,<br />
subversive of the best interests of the people and calculated in their<br />
consequences to disturb the tranquility of the country and to shake public<br />
confidence in the institutions and measures of the government, called for<br />
by the conditions and necessities of the people.&quot;  Five hundred copies<br />
of the report were ordered printed, and Judge Clark was summoned to appear<br />
before the house and answer to the charge.<br />
     On the 27th of May, 1822, Judge Clark made answer in writing, as<br />
follows:<br />
     &quot;In pronouncing a law that is incompatible with the constitution<br />
void, the judiciary does not assume a superiority over the legislature.<br />
It merely affirms the paramount obligation of the fundamental rule.<br />
It announces only that the will of the people, as expressed in their<br />
constitution, is above the will of any of the servants of the people.<br />
The decision was given after the most mature deliberation which I was<br />
able to bestow and from a firm conviction of the principles there<br />
mentioned, and I must have been not only faithless to my conscience,<br />
but to the constitution of the United States and the dignity due the<br />
judicial office had I expressed any other opinion.&quot;<br />
     The reply was altogether manly but did not avert or appease<br />
legislative wrath.  The legislature invoked the remedy of address to<br />
remove the judge from the bench, but the lack of a two-thirds majority<br />
caused the proceedings to fail.  In October, 1823, the case of Williams<br />
versus Blair was sustained as decided by Judge Clark in the court of<br />
appeals and transferred from the circuit judge to the higher court the<br />
rage of the legislature, and they attempted to legislate the court of<br />
appeals out of office, thus inaugurating the contest of the old and<br />
new court.<br />
     Judge Clark was elected to congress, serving from 1825 to 1831, and<br />
in 1836 he was elected governor, dying while in office, September 27,<br />
1839.  He was a lawyer of fine capacity and undoubted integrity, of fair<br />
literary attainments, for his day, of fine appearance, ready wit, lively<br />
disposition and easy address.  To the lighter graces he added all the<br />
sterner and manly virtues that inspire confidence and command respect.<br />
<br />
Clark Blythe<br />
=<br />
VA<br />
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[<a href="http://www.rootsweb.com/~kygenweb/kybiog/clark/clark.j.txt"  rel="nofollow">www.rootsweb.com</a>]]]></description>
            <dc:creator>MarthaCrossSargent</dc:creator>
            <category>Clark County Biographies</category>
            <pubDate>Fri, 16 Mar 2007 10:08:33 -0400</pubDate>
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        <item>
            <guid>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7433,7433#msg-7433</guid>
            <title>Barbee, William J. (no replies)</title>
            <link>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7433,7433#msg-7433</link>
            <description><![CDATA[ Text from Scott, Laurence W. (editor), Texas Pulpit by Christian<br />
Preachers. St. Louis: Christian Publishing Company, 1888. Pages 386-387.<br />
This online edition © 1996, James L. McMillan. Used by permission. Clark<br />
County.<br />
<br />
WILLIAM J. BARBEE was born in Winchester, Kentucky, July 14th, 1816. He<br />
was educated at Miama [sic] University, Oxford, Ohio. He studied medicine<br />
with Dr. Drake in Cincinnati, and took the degree of M. D. in 1836. He<br />
practiced for ten years, and then turned his attention to teaching, and<br />
has since been president of two colleges. He was baptized in Cincinnati,<br />
by Bro. James Challen, in 1840. In 1844 he commenced preaching. <br />
<br />
During the four score years of his ministry, he has labored chiefly in<br />
Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi, and Texas. He preached for the church at<br />
San Antonio till recently, when he removed to Ash Grove, Missouri, where<br />
he now resides. Dr. Barbee has given attention to several departments of<br />
natural science, and is known to many as the author of an elementary work<br />
on geology, and of a treatise on the cotton question. He has for<br />
twenty-five years been a contributor to numerous journals, literary,<br />
scientific, and religious. <br />
<br />
Barbee Drake Challen<br />
=<br />
OH TN MS TX MO<br />
<br />
[<a href="http://www.rootsweb.com/~kygenweb/kybiog/clark/barbee.wj.txt"  rel="nofollow">www.rootsweb.com</a>]]]></description>
            <dc:creator>MarthaCrossSargent</dc:creator>
            <category>Clark County Biographies</category>
            <pubDate>Fri, 16 Mar 2007 10:07:47 -0400</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <guid>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7432,7432#msg-7432</guid>
            <title>Allan, Thomas S. (no replies)</title>
            <link>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7432,7432#msg-7432</link>
            <description><![CDATA[ Kentucky: A History of the State, Battle, Perrin, &amp; Kniffin, Edition 8-B<br />
Clark Co.<br />
<br />
THOMAS S. ALLAN, a prominent physician at Allanville, Clark County,<br />
KY., was born in that county, October 20, 1857. His father, Francis S.<br />
Allan, a native of Clark County, was born April 19,1821, and was a farmer<br />
and miller. In politics he affiliated with the Democrats. He served as<br />
magistrate for sixteen years, was County Judge eight years, which office<br />
he held at the time of his death; he was a Royal Arch Mason, a member of<br />
Pineham Lodge No.444, and also a member of Winchester Chapter, No.12, and<br />
a  representative to the Grand Lodge; he died July 5, 1882.  He married<br />
Elizabeth  Haggard, of Clark County, daughter of Pleasant and Mary (Watts)<br />
Haggard, natives of Clark and Fayette Counties, respectively.  Seven<br />
children were born to them, of whom our subject is the youngest.  Lewis<br />
Allan, grandfather of Thomas S., was a native of Virginia and an early<br />
settler of Clark County, Ky., who died in Hartsville, Tenn. Thomas S.<br />
Allan was reared on the farm until seventeen years of age, then removed<br />
with his parents to Winchester, where he was educated. He began reading<br />
medicine in 1879 with Dr. Hubbard Taylor, of Winchester, and in February,<br />
1882, he graduated from the Hospital College of Medicine, Louisville,<br />
when he began practice at his present location.  He is a member of the<br />
State Medical Society and also of the Clark County Medical Society.<br />
November 25, 1885, he married Miss Lee Haggard, of Clark County, daughter<br />
of A. S. and Sarah (Reed) Haggard, of Kentucky.  One daughter has blessed<br />
their union, Mary L., born September 18, 1886.  Mr. Allan owns a farm of<br />
200 acres, which he manages in connection with his practice. The Doctor<br />
is a member of the Baptist Church.<br />
<br />
Allan Haggard Watts Taylor Reed<br />
=<br />
Clark-Ky Fayette-KY VA TN<br />
<br />
[<a href="http://www.rootsweb.com/~kygenweb/kybiog/clark/allan.ts.txt"  rel="nofollow">www.rootsweb.com</a>]]]></description>
            <dc:creator>MarthaCrossSargent</dc:creator>
            <category>Clark County Biographies</category>
            <pubDate>Fri, 16 Mar 2007 10:06:48 -0400</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <guid>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7431,7431#msg-7431</guid>
            <title>Allan, Frank (no replies)</title>
            <link>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7431,7431#msg-7431</link>
            <description><![CDATA[ History of Kentucky, five volumes, edited by Judge Charles Kerr,<br />
American Historical Society, New York &amp; Chicago, 1922, Vol. V, P. 330,<br />
Clark County<br />
<br />
     JUDGE FRANK ALLAN, of Allanville, was a widely known and prominent<br />
citizen of Clark County, and for eight years, until his death, performed<br />
the duties of the office of county judge with singular fidelity and<br />
efficiency.<br />
     Judge Allan, who died in 1882, at the age of sixty-two, was a son<br />
of Lewis and Sophia Allan.  He married Elizabeth Haggard, a daughter of<br />
Pleasant Haggard.  Frank Allan located at Allanville, which then<br />
contained a grist and saw mill, a carding factory, store, blacksmith<br />
shop and postoffice, and became an extensive farmer in that locality. <br />
He remained there until elected to the office of county judge, when he<br />
removed to Winchester, and had filled that office for eight years before<br />
his death.  His widow then returned to the old farm at Allanville, and<br />
remained at the old home until her death three years later.<br />
     There were seven children in the family of Judge Frank Allan and<br />
wife: James, a merchant at Allanville, who died at the age of fifty<br />
years; Pleasant, who was a farmer and died at the age of seventy;<br />
Sophia, who died in Allanville at he age of twenty-three, the wife of<br />
Sam Dethridge; Mollie, who became the wife of Woody Ecton and was the<br />
mother of Mrs. Audley Haggard; John, a resident of Winchester; Bettie,<br />
who died young, after her marriage to Allen Hampton; and Sidney, who<br />
practiced medicine at the old home at Allanville and died in middle<br />
life.<br />
     Mollie Allan, who was married at the age of twenty-one, secured a<br />
portion of the old Allan farm where Wood Ecton spent his active life. <br />
Woody Ecton died at Winchester June 22, 1903.  They had three children:<br />
Frank Allan Ecton, living near Allanville; Effie Ward, who died in<br />
Childhood; and Sudie, Mrs. Audley Haggard.<br />
<br />
Allan Dethridge Ecton Haggard Hampton<br />
=<br />
none<br />
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[<a href="http://www.rootsweb.com/~kygenweb/kybiog/clark/allan.f.txt"  rel="nofollow">www.rootsweb.com</a>]]]></description>
            <dc:creator>MarthaCrossSargent</dc:creator>
            <category>Clark County Biographies</category>
            <pubDate>Fri, 16 Mar 2007 10:06:02 -0400</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <guid>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7430,7430#msg-7430</guid>
            <title>Allan, Chilton (no replies)</title>
            <link>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7430,7430#msg-7430</link>
            <description><![CDATA[ HISTORY OF KENTUCKY, by Lewis Collins, and J.A. &amp; U.P. James, published <br />
1847.  Reprinted by Henry Clay Press, Lexington, Ky., 1968, pp. 234-235 <br />
[Clark county].<br />
<br />
The HON. CHILTON ALLAN, who for many years served as representative in <br />
congress from Kentucky, with a high reputation for ability and <br />
efficiency, is a citizen of this county.  he is a profound lawyer, a <br />
statesman of englarged and libral views, a sound politician, a devoted <br />
patriot, and a man of remarkably pure and elevated moral character.<br />
<br />
Allan<br />
=<br />
none<br />
<br />
[<a href="http://www.rootsweb.com/~kygenweb/kybiog/clark/allan.c.txt"  rel="nofollow">www.rootsweb.com</a>]]]></description>
            <dc:creator>MarthaCrossSargent</dc:creator>
            <category>Clark County Biographies</category>
            <pubDate>Fri, 16 Mar 2007 10:05:19 -0400</pubDate>
        </item>
        <item>
            <guid>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7429,7429#msg-7429</guid>
            <title>Adams, John G. (no replies)</title>
            <link>http://www.usbiographies.org/biographies/read.php?385,7429,7429#msg-7429</link>
            <description><![CDATA[ Kentucky: A History of the State, Battle, Perrin, &amp; Kniffin, Edition 8-B<br />
Clark Co.<br />
<br />
REV. JOHN G. ADAMS, a native of Clark County, Ky., was born September 8,<br />
1827.  His father, John Adams, a native of Culpeper County Va.,<br />
was born in 1775, emigrated to Kentucky, where he first settled in Clark<br />
County, removed to Madison, then to Estill County, and finally settled<br />
permanently in Clark County; he was a farmer by occupation and was a mem-<br />
ber of the Calvinistic Baptist Church seventy-five years. He married<br />
Elizabeth Parrish, a native of Madison County, Ky., daughter of William<br />
Parrish, a native of Virginia. She bore him seven sons and two daughters,<br />
the subject of this sketch being the eighth child.  Mrs. Adams died in<br />
1860, having been a consistent member of the Calvinistic Baptist Church<br />
for forty-five years. John Adams died at the age of ninety-eight; nine<br />
months and seven days. Elkany Adams, grandfather of John G., a native<br />
of Virginia, settled in Clark County, Ky., where he died shortly after<br />
his arrival. He was one of those who fought for America's Independence.<br />
The maternal grandfather of our subject was an early settler of Madison<br />
County, Ky. John G. Adams was reared on the farm, the pursuits of which<br />
he followed until nineteen years of age, when be worked for a time at<br />
the sawmill business; he then apprenticed himself to learn the black-<br />
smith trade with Robert W. Langley, of Dry Fork (said Langley after<br />
removed to Texas). He successfully engaged in his trade for eighteen<br />
years, when he began farming and preaching.  He engaged in minis-<br />
terial work in 1863, his pastoral labor being confined chiefly to<br />
Clark,Powell, Estill and Madison counties.  He settled on his pre-<br />
sent location about 1857, where he owns 378 acres of land, in two<br />
tracts, all well improved, which he successfully manages. June 21,<br />
1849, he married Miss Millie Rucker, of Clark County, daughter of<br />
Reuben and Margaret (Hardin) Rucker, natives, respectively, of Vir-<br />
ginia and Clark County, Ky.  Twelve children have been born to their<br />
union, viz: Sarah M., Mary E., Lucy J., Telitha F., Nancy B., Emma,<br />
James T., Reuben A., Sallie, Esther, Millie J., and Fielding. Lucy J.<br />
is deceased.  Politically Mr. Adams is Democrat.  He has been a mem-<br />
ber of the Christian Church since I 862.  He has attained the third<br />
degree in the Masonic fraternity. Mrs. Adams has been a member of<br />
the Christian Church for forty years.<br />
<br />
Adams Parrish Langley Rucker Hardin<br />
<br />
Clark-KY Madison-KY Estill-KY Powell-KY Culpeper-VA TX<br />
<br />
[<a href="http://www.rootsweb.com/~kygenweb/kybiog/clark/adams.jg.txt"  rel="nofollow">www.rootsweb.com</a>]]]></description>
            <dc:creator>MarthaCrossSargent</dc:creator>
            <category>Clark County Biographies</category>
            <pubDate>Fri, 16 Mar 2007 10:04:33 -0400</pubDate>
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