|
Inasmuch as it is proposed in the following pages
to pass under review a part of the business and professional life of the
village, it may not be amiss to sketch briefly the past and present of
our town.
Situated in the richest section of the fertile
county of Owen, nearly midway between Louisville and Cincinnati, only a
few minutes’ drive from the great artery of commerce that connects the
two cities, within easy reach of the Kentucky and Ohio Rivers, the
village enjoys unexcelled facilities for continual touch with the best
social and business life of the great Ohio Valley.
Owing to these splendid natural advantages, the beauty and
healthfulness of the location, it was the earliest settled community in
all the country, its history reaching back to a time when “the memory
of man runneth not to the contrary.”
A score of years before Owen county was organized
New Liberty was a flourishing and prosperous town, while during the
first seventy years of the century she was the largest, wealthiest and
most important community in this section. Especially during the years
1845-70 did the village enjoy a flourishing trade and unwonted
prosperity, offering the best educational advantages short of Georgetown
College, and having a highly cultured and polished society.
It is necessary to bear all this in mind in
order to read intelligently the foregoing pages, and fully to appreciate
the unrivalled supremacy and commanding influence of the church during
the first sixty or seventy years of the century.
The building of the L. & N. railroad soon
after the war worked much to the detriment of the village, and for some
years there was comparative dearth and stagnation; but for ten years
trade has been increasing, there has been a perceptible quickening of
intellectual, special and business life, and the town promises to regain
much of the prestige and importance of other days.
It is confidently expected that the new
electric railway now under contemplation, and which will give us direct
connection with the L. & N. railroad and the Kentucky and Ohio
rivers, will bring to the town an era of rapid growth and prosperity.
It is generally conceded that New Liberty is
the most attractive little city in the county. Its streets are
macadamized, well laid off, and lined with trees of a symmetrical and
beautiful growth. The freshness and beauty of the town during the summer
months make it a favorite resort, being the joy and comment of every
weary traveler.
With a citizenship made up largely of retired
farmers and businessmen, with schools equal to the best ion the country,
with churches live and aggressive, the town is a most charming place of
residence.
The people of our section were fortunate in
the coming of Dr. Pinkston to our midst. From the earliest years, the
physicians of our village have been men of rare skill and ability, and
whatever changes may have transpired in other respects, we are pleased
to believe that in this we maintain the prestige of former days.
In 1878, Dr. Pinkston graduated from the
celebrated College of Physicians and Surgeons located at Baltimore, Md.
In order to keep in touch with the best thought and progress of his
profession, he took a double post-graduate course in the Polyclinic
College of New York in 1894.
With a native genius for medicine, with a full
training in the best schools of the country, with an experience of 25
years in actual practice, the Doctor stands in the front ranks of his
profession.
(It is perhaps proper to say that Dr.
Pinkston does not advertise, the above being presented only at the
special solicitation and invitation of the editor of these pages.)
|