History of Decatur County, Indiana: its people, industries and institutions, Part 119

Author: Harding, Lewis Albert, 1880- [from old catalog] ed
Publication date: 1915
Publisher: Indianapolis, B. F. Bowen
Number of Pages: 1378


USA > Indiana > Decatur County > History of Decatur County, Indiana: its people, industries and institutions > Part 119


Note: The text from this book was generated using artificial intelligence so there may be some errors. The full pages can be found on Archive.org (link on the Part 1 page).


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Born in St. Paul, Adams township, in 1869, Harry W. Ballard is the son of Dr. D. J. and Anna (French) Ballard, natives of Decatur county and prominent citizens here.


Educated in the common and high schools of Decatur county, Harry W. Ballard became a student in T. C. Steel's art school under the direction of Mr. Forsyth and Mr. Steel as instructors. After finishing the course he attended the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts and later became an instructor in the John Herron Institute at Indianapolis in commercial art. He has been active in commercial art for more than twenty-five years, and


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during most of the past twenty-five years has acted as superintendent of the art department of various engraving establishments. Mr. Ballard is now the superintendent of the Printing Arts Company, of Indianapolis, and is on the art staff of the Woman's Magasine, of Elgin, Illinois. His life has been a very busy one and he has devoted his time to his profession.


Mr. Ballard has exhibited his work at the John Herron Art Institute with Indiana artists and this in itself is sufficient proof of the merit of his work. He works in oil, pastel, water colors, pen and ink and burnt wood. His work is characterized especially with realism and is true to nature and life.


Among his other accomplishments Mr. Ballard is a musician of .con- siderable ability. He plays the saxaphone, plays the piano and sings. He is indeed a true artist in every fiber of his being.


In 1897, Mr. Harry W. Ballard was married to Frances Floyd, a daugh- ter of E. L. and Anne (Paul) Floyd, natives of Decatur county. It was for the family of Mrs. E. L. Floyd that the town of St. Paul was named. E. L. Floyd, Mrs. Ballard's father, was a native of Kentucky, born in 1823. He left Kentucky with his parents and came to Shelby county, Indiana, where he was educated. Later he attended Indiana University for one year, and in 1855 was married to Anne Paul, a daughter of John P. Paul, a prominent citizen of Decatur county. After their marriage they began life for theni- selves in St. Paul in the home which Mrs. Ballard now owns. Mr. Floyd was a very successful man in all of his business undertakings and one of more than average ability. He was a man of high ideals whose outlook on life was the very brightest. In 1885 as a Republican he represented Decatur county in the Indiana General Assembly. He served valiantly as a soldier in the Mexican War. A public-spirited citizen and man, he had a fair knowl- edge of law. Though not professing to be a lawyer, he had no little law practice. E. L. Floyd was one of the biggest men mentally who has ever lived in this community.


Anne Gregg Paul, the wife of E. L. Floyd, and the mother of Mrs. Harry W. Ballard, was the eldest child born to her parents. She was born in St. Paul, in 1837, in the old brick residence which is today the oldest building in the town, and which was built by her father in 1823. John P. Paul was born in 1801 and was of Scottish and English origin. He was one of the solid and substantial citizens of Decatur county and had much to do with the development of this section. He died in 1867. During his early life he was a member of the Whig party. Upon the disintegration of that party and the formation of the Republican party he became a Republican.


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E. L. and Anne Gregg (Paul) Floyd had six children, of whom Mrs. Harry W. Ballard was the youngest. The names of the children in the order of their birth are as follow: James E., who was born in 1855, was a gradu- ate of Indiana University and died in 1893 at Decatur, Illinois; Walter F., 1857, and who was a graduate of Butler College, died in 1882; Oliver P., 1861, is living in Granite City, Illinois, and is connected with the engineering department of the American Steel Foundry Company; George G., 1865, was a student at Purdue University, lives at Riverside, Illinois, where he is chief engineer for the American Steel Foundry Company ; Nellie F., 1867, married George L. Mueller, who is now deceased; Frances is the wife of Mr. Ballard.


Anne Gregg Paul was born in 1873 in St. Paul and grew to womanhood in this town. She was educated in the common and high schools of Decatur county and was graduated from the St. Paul high school with the class of 1889. In 1890 she went to Purdue University, at Lafayette, where she studied for four years, finishing the scientific course in 1894. After finish- ing the course at Purdue she came home and here remained for three years, until her marriage in 1897 to Mr. Ballard.


Mr. and Mrs. Ballard have one son, Jack Floyd Ballard, who was born in 1905, in Southport, near Indianapolis. He is now a lad of ten years and is attending school at St. Paul.


Mrs. Ballard is intensely interested and actively engaged in flower grow- ing. She is in partnership with her sister, Mrs. Nellie F. Mueller, the widow of George L. Mueller, of Lafayette, Indiana. Their flower garden has been appropriately named the "Dripping Springs Garden," so named from .the dripping springs along Flat Rock river, well known to nature lovers of cen- tral Indiana. The garden, which is located on the Pant farm, originally owned and entered by William Paul in 1821, will eventually comprise the entire farm of a hundred and seventy acres. It lies north and east of St. Paul and extends up to the edge of town and is an ideal spot for the tourist and lover of nature. It is traversed by beautiful Flat Rock river. Mrs. Ballard and her sister, Mrs. Mueller, expect eventually to make a flower garden out of the entire farm and to irrigate it from the springs.


Mrs. Nellie Mueller, who is Mrs. Ballard's partner in the flower farm and garden, grew to womanhood and was educated in the common and high schools of Decatur county. She later attended Purdue University, where she was a student in the scientific course. She was married in 1888 to George L. Mueller, whose parents were natives of Germany. Mr. Mueller died in 1909, leaving one child, Floyd Mueller, who was born in 1890, and who is an architect in Chicago. He is a graduate of Purdue University.


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Mrs. Harry W. Ballard is a woman of more than ordinary ability, and of pleasing and attractive personality. She is a member of the Methodist Episcopal church at St. Paul and widely acquainted in this county. She is a member of the Irvington Coterie Club, of Indianapolis, and also the Depart- ment Club, of Greensburg. At their beautiful home in St. Paul, Mr. and Mrs. Ballard entertain on a large scale and have a host of friends in Indiana and neighboring states. Mr. Ballard is a member of the Masonic fraternity and a member of the Knights of Pythias. He is a Republican and a member of the Methodist church. He takes an active interest in public affairs and is keenly interested in public questions. Decatur county has every reason to be proud of the careers of Mr. and Mrs. Harry W. Ballard.


GEORGE L. HESS.


George L. Hess, a well-known sportsman, business man and politician of St. Paul, Decatur county, Indiana, was born in 1867, in Jennings county, Indiana, the son of John V. and Elizabeth (Clillis) Hess, who undertook the voyage from Germany to America in a sailboat in 1852. The voyage took six months and on this voyage their first child was born. During the trip the mother of John V. Hess died and was buried at sea. On the arrival of the family in America after a few weeks sojourn in New York City they journeyed to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and thence by boat to Cincinnati, Ohio, where they settled and where the elder Mr. Hess took up his business of brick making. After remaining in Cincinnati for three or four years the family removed to Jennings county, Indiana, near St. Ann on Bear creek, where they lived on a farm for several years. Eventually, however, they sold out and removed to a farm in Bartholomew county, near Alert. This last farm was known as the old Thomas Johnson estate and here the family remained for four years and then removed to Decatur county, Indiana, settling near the town of Burney, where they lived for two years and then moved to a farm near St. Paul, one-half mile from St. Omer. Later they removed to Orange township, Rush county, to the Wilson farm, where they lived for sixteen years, when they sold out and removed to St. Paul, January 13, 1896. Here George L. Hess went into business. He had begun life for himself when about twelve or fourteen years old, launching out into the horse and dog business. He has been very successful in both lines of endeavor Being a great lover of horses and dogs he has become an extensive breeder


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of purebred fox hounds and bird dogs. Mr. Hess is a member of the National Fox Hunters Association of Kentucky and has participated in all of its meets. He has been especially successful as a breeder of dogs and like- wise as a breeder of horses. He bred and trained "Mande H.," pacer, which attained a record of 2:1614 in 1893. Mr. Hess's business as a horse and dog breeder far exceeds that of any other person in Decatur or Shelby counties, a notable fact when it is remembered that St. Paul is only about one-fifth as large as either Greensburg or Shelbyville. His personality has been one of the large factors in his success, and in such a business as this where so much depends upon the honor and integrity of the breeder and dealer he has been fortunate since he has the unqualified confidence of the people.


On December 2, 1885, George L. Hess was married to Nettie Frakes, daughter of David Frakes, whose wife was a Pierce, natives of Decatur county and successful farmers of this county. Likewise they were well- known and well-respected citizens. To Mr. and Mrs. Hess was born one daughter, Minnie E., who is the wife of Elmer Shortridge. Mr. and Mrs. Shortridge have one daughter. Percella.


In 1891 Mr. Hess was married, secondly, to Cora D. Higgs, a daughter of George and Elizabeth (Burris) Higgs, natives of Decatur county, and well-known and respected citizens. To this union was born one daughter, Edna C. Hess, who married J. T. McCoy, the son of Curtis McCoy, of Decatur county. They have one son, George Trimble McCoy.


George L. Hess is one of the solid, substantial citizens of Decatur county, and one whose word is known to be as good as his bond.


CLYDE C. MORRISON, M. D.


No one is quite able to measure the value of the work performed by the skillful and conscientious physician. His work is performed under circum- stances, which call forth not only his best individual talents but likewise his most active and warmest sympathies. Unless the physician be equipped by temperament and personality with a breadth and depth of sympathy, his tal- ents are likely to avail him very little. Not that a large measure of profes- sional training is unimportant or unnecessary, but with this must go a measure of sincerity and a spirit of service which transcends all professional training. Dr. Clyde C. Morrison, one of the able and well-equipped physicians of


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Greensburg. Indiana, has enjoyed a large measure of success in the practice of his profession because he possesses the natural instinct of service. Trained as a farmer, mechanic, teacher, drug clerk, physician, soldier, he has broad- ened these experiences by his travels into practically every state of the Union and Province of Canada, and iuto old Mexico.


Clyde C. Morrison has scarcely reached the prime of life, having been born on August 24. 1872, in Clifty township, Bartholomew county, Indiana. lle is the son of Robert and Mary J. ( Mccullough) Morrison. On both his paternal and maternal sides, Doctor Morrison's ancestry is Scotch-Irish, his grandparents, James and Nancy Morrison, having come to this country from County Down, Ireland, and settled in Bartholomew county in pioneer times. Ilis grandparents on his maternal side of the family, Henry and Elizabeth Mccullough, came to this country from County Tyrone, Ireland. They settled first in Butler county, Ohio, but later moved to Bartholomew county, Indiana.


Although his father died in 1880, Doctor Morrison's mother is still liv- ing and resides at Hartsville. She was born on November 5, 1839. Notwith- standing the fact that she is now seventy-five years of age, she is still well preserved and in possession of all of her native faculties.


From the time he was eight until he was eighteen, he lived with his grandfather. Henry Mccullough, a farmer of Columbus township, who resided one mile east of Columbus and attended the district schools and the Columbus high school. Afterwards he attended the Central Normal Col- lege of Danville and the Valparaiso University. Beginning his career in the school room at the age of twenty, he taught four years in the district schools of Bartholomew county, two years in the city schools of Columbus and three years as principal of the high school at Hartsville. Having begun the study of medicine, while clerking in a drug store he completed the course at Kentucky School of Medicine at Louisville, Kentucky, and Grand Rapids Medical College. He has taken post-graduate work at Cincinnati and Columbus, Ohio, and at Chicago, Illinois. At the outbreak of the Spanish- American War, he enlisted in the hospital corps of the army and assisted Major Vaughn in establishing the Third Division hospital of the Seventh Army Corps at Camp Cuba Libre, Jacksonville, Florida, and was later trans- ferred to Fort Thomas, Kentucky, and Fort Monroe, Virginia. Eventually, he was transferred to Washington City and discharged at that place after the war.


Doctor Morrison was engaged in the practice of his profession at Hlarts- ville and Burney, and came to Greensburg March 1, 1011.


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On November 16, 1898, Doctor Morrison was married to Hattie B. Rominger, of Hartsville, the daughter of Thomas W. and Sarah Rominger. Doctor and Mrs. Morrison have three children: Thomas R., who was born April 25, 1900; Sheldon, who was born March 17, 1906, and James T., who was born February 12, 1908.


Religiously, Doctor Morrison and family are members of the Methodist Episcopal church. Fraternally, he is a member of the Knights of Pythias and the Free and Accepted Masons.


No better evidence of the confidence placed in Doctor Morrison by his fellow townsmen and by the citizens of Decatur county can be presented than by the fact that he is president of the board of directors of the new Young Men's Christian Association, an institution which is perhaps, as a public enterprise, dearer to the hearts of the people of this city than anything undertaken within recent years.


JUDGE DAVID ALBERT MYERS.


Indiana has long been distinguished for the high rank of her bench and bar. Perhaps none of the newer states can justly boast of abler jurists or attorneys. Many lawyers of this state have achieved national fame. While the growth and development of the state in the last half century has been marvelous, viewed from almost any standpoint. yet of no other class of her citizenship has this state greater reason for just pride than for the distinction and eminence gained by her judges and attorneys. Judge David Albert Myers, of Greensburg, Indiana, has long ranked as a profound lawyer and an able, eminent and impartial jurist. He served a little more than eight years as a judge of the appellate court of Indiana, and before that was for a short time judge of the eighth judicial district by appointment.


David Albert Myers was born on August 5, 1859. near Logansport, in Cass county, Indiana, and is the son of Henry C. and Maria ( Bright ) Myers, the former of whom was born in 1834. and who died. April 10, 1902, and the latter of whom was born in 1836. Henry C. Myers was a native of Ohio, horn near Hamilton, in Butler county, the son of John Myers, a pioneer set- tler of Cass county, who came to Indiana in the early part of 1835. when Logansport was a mere hamlet. There he purchased a tract of land, and clearing it, became a prominent farmer and citizen and a leader in the life of the community. During the latter years of his life he ranked as the oldest settler. On this farm Henry C. Myers, the father of Judge David A., was


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reared and married. He owned a farm within a mile of the pioneer home- stead and became a prosperous citizen. In later years he owned four hundred and seventy acres of land. A Republican, he took great interest in political matters. Judge Myers' mother was a native of Virginia and the daughter of Anson Bright, an early settler of Cass county, who lived near the home of John Myers and who settled in Cass county in 1841. Judge Myers' mother lives on the old home place. There were four children in the Myers family. Of these children, Emma M. is at home : Charles W. owns a part of the home farm; Van is a farmer in Cass county; and David A. is the subject of this sketch.


After assisting his father on the farm until seventeen years old, Judge Myers entered Smithson College, where he remained for a year and one-half. Later he attended the Danville Normal School for a year and one-half, also Union University and the Albany Law School, from which he was graduated in 1881. The same year he began the practice of law in Greensburg, and today is regarded as the dean of the legal profession in this city. At the end of his first year he moved to his present office in the fall of 1882. He has one of the finest law libraries in the state of Indiana. His first political office was that of city attorney to which he was elected in 1886. He held this office until his election as prosecuting attorney in 1890 for the circuit com- prising Rush and Decatur counties. This office he held two terms or four years. In 1899 Judge Myers was appointed by Governor Mount as judge of the eighth judicial district and served until the election following in 1900. At the judicial convention in 1900 Rush and Decatur counties each nomin- ated a candidate for judge, and Judge Douglas Morris was elected. The legislature subsequently redistricted these counties, and Decatur county was joined with Bartholomew.


On October 18, 1904. Judge Myers was appointed a judge of the appel- late court for the first Indiana district, and on the same day was selected as the nominee of the Republican party for appellate judge. He was elected and served four years, and in 1908 was renominated and reelected, serving until January 1, 1913. In the election of 1908 Judge Myers had the largest plurality of any candidate on the Republican ticket, a plurality of over six- teen thousand. That year several candidates on the Democratic ticket, including the Democratic candidate for governor, were elected. Judge Myers was renominated in 1912 without opposition, but the state went Democratic and he was defeated. No word of suspicion has ever been cast regarding the judicial record of Judge Myers. He has had an honorable and successful career on the bench and one of which he and the party which nominated him to this office may be proud.


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One year before finishing his college course David Albert Myers was married to Laura Hart, who died in 1883. In September, 1907, he was mar- ried, secondly, to Margaret McNaught, the daughter of M. F. McNaught, proprietor of the Garland Milling Company, of Greensburg.


A stockholder in the Greensburg Electric Light Company, Judge Myers is also a director of the Greensburg National Bank and has been since its organization in 1900. He is a member of the Free and Accepted Masons, and is a Scottish Rite Mason of the thirty-second degree. He is a member of the Knights Templar at Shelbyville and the Mystic Shrine at Indianapolis, and also a member of the Odd Fellows and the Benevolent and Protective Order of Elks.


HON. FRANCIS I. GALBRAITH.


Every one who lives in a state and enjoys its protection, must contribute through his work, directly or indirectly, to further the object of the state as a community for the purpose of justice and civilization. Not until then is he a useful member of the state. There can be no doubt but that it is the duty of all men to contribute so far as they are able to the well-being of the community where they live, of the state in which they were born and the country which has nurtured them.


Francis I. Galbraith, farmer, manufacturer, banker, commission mer- chant and public-spirited man of affairs, is one of the leading citizens of Decatur county and a man who is well known in the capital of the state, where he has spent a considerable part of his time in recent years and where he has extensive interests in many kinds of property.


Born on October 29, 1860, near Rugby, Bartholomew county, Indiana, Francis I. Galbraith is a son of Enos S. and Catherine (Phumphry) Gal- braith, the former of whom was the son of Enos Galbraith, Sr.


Francis I. Galbraith attended school in Bartholomew county, and later entered Hartsville College, where for some time he was a student. Until twenty years old, he lived in Bartholomew county, near Rugby. At the age of twenty, he went to Kansas and was there engaged in the cattle busi- ness for four years, or until 1884, when he returned to Bartholomew county and settled again near Rugby.


One year later, at the age of twenty-five, Mr. Galbraith was married, on September 1, to Mary Butler, who was born in Bartholomew county, Indiana, in 1865, and who is the daughter of Frank and Susan ( Woodard ) Butler. Mrs. Galbraith's father was one of the largest stock and fancy


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farmers in Decatur county, where both he and his wife spent practically all of their lives. Mr. and Mrs. Galbraith have one son, Frank E. Galbraith, who was born on September 11, 1886, at Rugby, Indiana, and who attended the country schools of Bartholomew county. In 1900 he moved with his parents to Sunman, where he still lives. In 1914 he was married to Bessie Grosseclrouse.


After his marriage, Francis I. Galbraith removed to Rugby, where he engaged in the grain business for about one year, but he afterwards removed to Burney, Decatur county, where he and his father were engaged in the grain business and in stock shipping until 1900. At this time Mr. Galbraith removed to Summan, Indiana, and there engaged in the hardwood lumber manufacturing business with William E. Talbert. Seven years later, Mr. Galbraith purchased Mr. Talbert's interest in this business and took into the business as a partner his son, Frank E., who was made manager and who still retains this position.


In the fall of 1912, Mr. Galbraith came to Indianapolis and assisted in the organization of the old Indiana State Bank, which has since been reor- ganized and renamed the Commercial National Bank. Mr. Galbraith was vice-president of the old bank and retained the same position in the new" organization, the Commercial National. He owns one-half interest in the Ray & Galbraith Commission Company, located at the Indianapolis stock- yards, and is also operating two large cotton plantations in the delta lands of lower Louisiana. Aside from these interests, he has large real-estate holdings in Indianapolis, especially flats and houses.


Mr. Galbraith is a staneh Democrat, and has always been faithful to his party. He has contributed liberally to the financial side of the party, and during the legislative sessions of 1909 and 1911 served as a member of the House of Representatives from Ripley county. He took a leading part in the sessions of the house and was considered one of its substantial members. In 1909 the Democratic party had come into power for the first time in many years and, although the opposite party maintained its control of the Senate, the Democratic party had a substantial majority in the lower house. Mr. Galbraith was a part of this majority and assisted in framing much of the important legislation which came from the General Assembly that year.


Mr. and Mrs. Galbraith are members of the Methodist church. Mr. Galbraith is a Scottish Rite Mason, a Shriner and a member of the Benevo- lent Protective Order of Elks at Greensburg. Although having wide inter- ests scattered over a great deal of territory, Mr. Galbraith makes his home in Sunman, Indiana.


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