Ripley Co
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Ripley County Pioneers
BIOGRAPHIES
Joseph Addison Pope
JOSEPH ADDISON POPE - He whose name heads this sketch has been familiar
with farm life from his earliest boyhood, and as a follower of this the most useful of
callings, he has at all times shown good judgment, and has been successful. He was born
in Wake County, N.C., in 1820, in which State his parents, Simon and Martha (Cole) Pope,
were also born, the birth of the father occurring in 1793. They made their home in the
Old North State until about 1824, then removed to west Tennessee, and both parents died
in Benton County in 1840. They were highly respected citizens, were honest and industrious,
and became well to do as tillers of the soil. For a number of years the father taught
school, and for some time ably filled the office of justice of the peace. The paternal
grandfather was for a short time a soldier in the Revolutionary War. He was of English
origin and died in Wake County, N.C., as did also his wife. The maternal grandfather,
Thomas Cole, was a farmer and was killed in a neighborhood difficulty when Mrs. Pope was
a small child. His wife died in Tennessee. Simon Pope became the father of nineteen
children, only four of whom lived to be grown: Harriet J., who died in Benton County, Tenn.,
in 1891, the wife of Charles Cowell; Leonard H. died at Nashville, Tenn., while a prisoner
of war; Joseph Addison; and Delaney, who died in Mississippi County, Mo., the wife of Samuel
Fittle. The early educational advantages of Joseph Addison Pope were of meager description,
and he was reared to a knowledge of hard work on his father's farm. In 1844 he was united
in marriage in Benton County, Tenn., with Eliza A., daughter of Reuben and Sarah Bridges,
who were born in North Carolina and east Tennessee, respectively, and eventually breathed
their last in Benton County, Tenn. In 1868, in Ripley County, Mo., Mrs. Pope was called
from life, after she had borne her husband seven children: Delaney A., the deceased wife
of D. P. Thomas; Reuben, a farmer in Ripley County; Simon, Joseph, Leonard, Eliza Jane and
Sarah, all of whom are dead except Reuben. In 1870 Mr. Pope's second marriage occurred,
Mrs. Harriet Pitman becoming his wife. She died five months later, and in 1872 he wedded
Mrs. Emily Black, who died about two years later. In 1875 Mr. Pope married his present
wife, Melissa Hart. He has been a resident of Ripley County, Mo., since 1855, the journey
by wagon to this section occupying about twenty-one days. Their home was in Buckskull until
the opening of the Civil War, after which they resided at different places in the neighborhood
until about sixteen years ago, when they settled in the woods on the farm on which they now
reside. Mr. Pope owns 150 acres of well-improved land, is a thrifty and successful farmer,
and being scrupulously honest in all his business transactions, he is universally respected.
He has witnessed almost the entire development of the county and has assisted in bringing about
this desirable stage of affairs. Until the opening of the war he was engaged in merchandising
as well as farming. He has always been a Democrat politically, cast his first presidential
vote for Polk in 1844, and for six years was justice of the peace in Tennessee. He is a
member of Pitman Lodge No. 149, of the A.F. & A.M., and he and his wife are members of the
Cumberland Presbyterian Church.
Additional Comments:
Extracted from:
A REMINISCENT HISTORY OF THE OZARK REGION
COMPRISING A CONDENSED GENERAL HISTORY, A BRIEF DESCRIPTIVE HISTORY OF EACH
COUNTY, AND NUMEROUS BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES OF PROMINENT CITIZENS OF SUCH
COUNTIES. p 708
ILLUSTRATED.
CHICAGO: GOODSPEED BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS. 1894.
File at: http://ftp.usgenweb.com/pub/usgenweb/mo/ripley/bios/ponder_pj
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File contributed for use in USGenWeb by:
Peggy Cannady pcannady6@gmail.com June 14, 2009
Author: Goodspeed Brothers (1894)
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