Harrison Bio

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Harrison Bio



Hello all:

 I found a web page of Kentucky Biographies.
 http://www.starbase21.com/kybiog/
 Only one Harrison, so far. Here it is. This guy isn't in the Repository, but
his parents are.


 Kentucky: A History of the State, Battle, Perrin, & Kniffin, 7th ed.,
 1887, Boone Co.

 REV. JOSEPH CABELL HARRISON.  The name of Joseph Cabell Harrison is
 closely identified with the establishment of Presbyterianism in Boone
 and other counties of northern Kentucky.  He came to Boone from Fayette
 County in 1833.  He was a Virginian by birth, the son of Robert Carter
 and Ann Cabell Harrison, who emigrated from Cumberland County, Va., to
 Kentucky in 1806, and settled on their estate near Lexington, which
 still bears the name of "Elkhill".  There were three sons and seven
 daughters of this family: Joseph Cabell, the eldest son, born in 1793,
 Carter and Robert.  They were all, on reaching manhood, farmers, as was
 their father, and lived on their own estates in Fayette County.*  Carter
 married Miss Russell, and died young, leaving one son, Carter Harrison,
 the late mayor of Chicago.  Robert married Miss Tompkins, of Lexington,
 and removed to Booneville, Mo. He was a lawyer by profession, and was a
 member of the Legislature both of Kentucky and Missouri.  He left only
 one daughter.  Joseph Cabell married Sophia, daughter of Dr. J. H. Rice,
 of Christian County, and granddaughter of Rev. David Rice, eminent a
 century ago as the founder of Presbyterianism in Kentucky, and
 intimately connected with the founding of its education institutions.
 Mr. Harrison received a liberal education, mostly at Transylvania, and
 studied for the ministry under the late Rev. Robert H. Bishop, D.D.
 About the year 1824 he established in Lexington, in connection with his
 kinsman, Rev. John Breckinridge, The Western Luminary, which was the
 first religious paper in Kentucky.  They were its first editors. He
 also, prior to his coming to Boone, founded Mount Horeb Church, in
 Fayette County.  He organized this church in the house of Mrs. Mary H.
 Breckinridge, his maternal aunt, and the land for the church
 building was given by David Castleman, his brother-in-law.  The semi-
 centennial of this old church was celebrated in April, 1877.  He founded
 the churches of Richwood and Burlington, in Boone County, about the year
 1835.  The fiftieth anniversary of the founding of Richwood was
 celebrated in May, 1885.  The church at Union is a colony from Richwood,
 and that at Crittenden, probably a colony from old Lebanon Church, in
 Grant County, where he preached for some years.  Mr. Harrison was
 possessed of good pulpit ability, and was a fluent speaker and writer;
 but his chief excellence was in being a true servant of God, zealous in
 his Master's cause.  During his latter years he had no pastoral charge,
 but preached often in the adjoining counties.  At different times during
 his ministry he was in the employment of the Board of Domestic Missions,
 and sent to preach in destitute parts of the State, and sometimes in
 other States.  He was a man of fine social qualities, and most amiable
 character, and the purest motives, but impulsive and easily influenced
 by others.  But if under misapprehension he was lead to do a wrong or an
 injustice to another, with true manliness he was willing and eager to
 atone for the injury.  He died in 1860, in the sixty-eighth year of his
 age.  "Many men have served God with more renown, but none with a purer
 heart, or deeper devotion."  Mrs. Harrison, after eleven years of
 widowhood, surrounded by her children and their families, died in the
 year 1871, at the age of seventy-two.  She was a gifted and most
 interesting woman, with quick sympathies and the warmest affections.
 For some years she was in declining health, and, calmly anticipating
 death, she literally and intelligently "set her house in order," both
 temporally and spiritually, and when the solemn event came, she laid
 down her mortal life, as one would fold and lay aside a worn-out garment
 that she had no longer any use for.  Their remains lie in the burying
 ground of Richwood Church, for the upbuilding of which church they gave
 their efforts, their prayers and their means.  They left six children:
 Mrs. Anna C. Graves, the oldest; Robert C. Harrison, Mrs. Lucy Jordan,
 Mrs. Maria Clarkson and Mrs. Mary Corbin; all living at this writing
 except the youngest, the lovely and beloved Mrs. Susan R. Gaines.  The
 sisters of Mr. Harrison were Mrs. Hugh Brent, of Paris; Mrs. Samuel Q.
 Richardson, of Frankfort; Mrs. A. Bulkley, of Chicago; Mrs. Dr. Sloan,
 of Missouri; Mrs. Samuel Brown, Mrs. James Devore and Mrs. David
 Castleman, of Fayette County.  Mrs. Castleman is the only surviving
 member of the family [See sketch of Graves Family.]

 *The Harrisons were of English origin; were in Virginia as early as
 1645, and identified with its history and government.  But three of that
 generation came West: Robert and Peyton, brothers, and William H.
 Harrison, their first cousin, who was afterward President of the United
 States.

 Harrison Cabell Russell Tompkins Rice Bishop Breckinridge Graves Jordan
 Clarkson Corbin Gaines Brent Richardson Bulkley Sloan Brown Devore
 Castleman
 =
 Fayette-KY Christian-KY Grant-KY Paris-Bourbon-KY Cumberland-VA IL MO


 -Richard


Richard Harrison/Encinitas, CA
Researching: Ammann, Ballou, Basner, Bircham, Blackford, Bodenhofer,
Buckner, Byerly, Choyinski, Conlin, Easterly, Guy, Harrison, Hohmann,
Jeffries, Killen, Mustain, Reiss, Sinden, Skipton, Soesbe, Stivers, Tallman,
Tracey, Wagoner, Walsh, Winn
 









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