-
Rouse, Emma
-
Lloyd, John Uri
John Uri Lloyd was born in 1849. His family moved to Florence when he was a small child. He was an eye-witness to the Civil War skirmish in Florence, which affected him through life. He became an apprentice in a pharmacy at about age 14 and soon memorized the entire pharmacopeia, in Latin, though he had little formal schooling.
-
Lloyd, Nelson Marvin
Nelson Marvin Lloyd, the father of John Uri Lloyd, was born in 1821 and married Sophia Webster. He moved his family to Boone County, and taught school in Florence. His school closed in 1859, and in 1860 he bought out J.N. Early's general store. (Loder diaries) He is listed as a merchant living in Petersburg in the 1860 U.S. Federal Census.
-
Webster, Sophia
The decedent of Massachusetts governor John Webster, Sophia Webster was married to Nelson M. Lloyd and gave birth to John Uri Lloyd in 1849 in West Bloomfield, New York. (Sebree, page1)
-
Dinsmore, Julia Stockton
Julia Stockton Dinsmore was born on March 6, 1833, to James and Martha Macomb Dinsmore, in Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana. Her father was part-owner of a sugar cane and cotton plantation along Bayou Black. Julia was a child of nine when her family moved up the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers to their new home in the Belleview Bottoms section of Boone County.
-
Crouch, Myrax J., Dr.
Myrax Josiah Crouch was born in 1865. He first married Elizabeth (“Betty”) Gaines. After her death in 1923, he married Ray Cross with whom he had a son, Myrix T. Crouch.
-
Kirtley, Anna G.
-
Kirtley, James A.
The son of Robert Kirtley, James was born in Boone County on May 26, 1822.
-
Cropper, Mary Bess
The sister of famed judge Carroll Lee Cropper, Mary Bess was a college graduate and well-traveled woman. She attended the University of Southern Minnesota in Mankato (Minn.) in the 1960s. She is probably best known for her travel memoir, 'Ten Weeks Abroad.'
-
Cropper, Woodford Lee
-
Beckett, Malle
Malle Coyle was a long-time genealogist in Boone County. She was an organizing member and office holder in the Boone County Daughters of the American Revolution. She also held offices in state DAR, Daughters of American Colonist, Colonial Dames of the 17th Century, and Daughters of 1812, as well as many other organizations and associations.
-
Coyle, Clifford
Clifford Coyle, who was often known as “Peaches,” was born in 1904. He married long-time friend Malle Beckett around 1949.
-
Conner, Hubert
Hubert Conner was a farmer living outside Hebron in the early 20th century. He owned a 400-acre farm on Conner Road where he raised registered Holstein cows.
-
Batterson, William
Batterson was an architect and stonemason. He is believed to have designed the Alonzo Gaines House in Hebron. He is also credited with designing and/or building the Allie Corn House and the Bullittsburg Baptist Church.
-
Townsend, Jerusha
Jerusha Alexander was born around 1753. She was the wife of Revolutionary War veteran, Lieutenant James Alexander.
-
Tull, Nancy
-
Wallace, Mary M.
-
Macomb, Martha Keturah
"Born in New York, Martha was the fifteenth child of Jane Marshall and Alexander Macomb. At the age of thirty-one she married James Dinsmore in Burlington, New Jersey. After a honeymoon at Yellow Springs, Ohio, she remained in Cincinnati to give birth to her first child while James prepared a home for her in Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana. Two more children were born there and perhaps a son who died in infancy. Martha died in August of 1859, just seven days after her eldest daughter, Isabella, married. " --Cathy Callopy
-
Love, Eugene Joseph, Dr.
-
Bristow, Mary Beckley
Mary Beckley Bristow was born on November 18, 1808 in Boone County, Kentucky. She died in 1890 in Kenton County, Kentucky. In 1858, Mary began a diary of what she called a "Record" of daily events that took place in her life until September 19, 1863 when her first volume was full. Aside from her daily life, the diary would contain letters, bible verses and religious interpretations. On September 21, 1863, Mary started her second volume of spiritual writings to her Father until 1871.
-
Berkshire, Frank Walton, Sr.
The U.S. Customs and Border Protection regards him as being the "Father of the U.S. Border Patrol."
-
Calvert, Metella
-
Calvert, Harriett
-
Calvert, Lucian J.
-
Calvert, Benjamin Stephens