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Hoping to wreck Marshall's candidacy, a man named Jordan Harris charged that Marshall had, in a letter to John Crittenden, Sr., acknowledged himself to be a liar. [20] In the pages of the Kentucky Gazette, Marshall called on Harris to publish the letter. [20] Harris was so insulted by Marshall's demand that he threatened to cane him.
In addition to his legal practice when he returned to Kentucky, Crittenden also operated plantations and owned enslaved people. In 1830, his household included 12 free white persons and 6 enslaved people. [16] In 1850, Crittenden owned 44 enslaved people (11 women above age 16, 7 men, 13 boys and 13 girls). [17]
Crittenden County, located on the Ohio and Tradewater Rivers in the Pennyroyal region of Kentucky, was created by the state legislature on April 1, 1842, from a portion of Livingston County. It became the state's 91st county, and was named for John J. Crittenden, a U.S. senator, attorney general, and governor of Kentucky. The first county seat ...
Kentucky's 1st congressional district is a congressional district in the U.S ... Crittenden: Marion: 8,974 57 Cumberland: ... Marshall: Benton: 31,744 169 Metcalfe:
Early in 1861, John Marshall Harlan. [note 1] moved from Danville to Louisville Kentucky.When the military companies were raised for defense of the city in the spring of that year, Harlan was captain of the Crittenden Union Zouaves.
Residents in Marion and Crittenden County are on the brink of running out of water. Here’s what triggered the crisis and what’s being done. Marion faces ongoing water crisis, came within 10 ...
Marshall County: 157: Benton: 1842: Calloway County: John Marshall, Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court (1801–35) 31,744: 305 sq mi (790 km 2) Martin County: 159: Inez: 1870: Floyd County, Johnson County, Pike County, and Lawrence County: John P. Martin, United States Congressman from Kentucky (1845–47) 10,928: 231 sq mi (598 ...
Crittenden, the son of John J. Crittenden, was a Major General for the Union Army in the American Civil War. Additionally, Crittenden was U.S. Consul to Liverpool and later Kentucky State Treasurer. In 1859, James H. Garrard, the grandson of Kentucky's second Governor, purchased the property. Garrard served as a General for the Union Army in ...