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A small post village of Gallatin county, situated
on the head waters of Sugar Creek, 7 miles from Warsaw, the capital of
the county, 50 miles north from Frankfort, 31 miles from Covington, and
75 north-east from Louisville.
It contains one Baptist
Church, one Masonic Lodge (No. 216), one hotel, two general stores, one
physician, two magistrates, one blacksmith, one boot and shoe maker, one
saddle and harness maker, and ten or twelve resident planters.
Population 40. Post office established about 1839.
Wm. L. Richards,
postmaster. |
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Brown, Thomas |
general merchant |
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Coneley, G. M. |
planter |
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Coner, Samuel |
planter |
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Elliston, Jones |
justice of the peace |
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Height |
boot and shoemaker, dealer |
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Holton, John N. |
planter |
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Jones, Jonas |
hotel proprietor |
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Landram, James P. |
planter |
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Lee, Elder John W. |
pastor of the Baptist Church |
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Lillard, Rev. David |
planter |
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Lillard, Joseph S. |
planter |
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Richards, William L. |
postmaster, physician and surgeon |
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Ringo, John |
planter |
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Swope, B. |
planter |
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Swope, Henry F. |
general merchant |
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Turley, Joseph |
planter and magistrate |
Woolf, William P.
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blacksmith
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