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Lyman U. Humphrey

    

(P56)*HUMPHREY, Lyman U. is a former Governor of Kansas. One of the states most honorable and distinguished citizens. His experience as a soldier, a journalist, and a long successful career as a lawyer, together with his efficient service to the state in high official station entitle him to more than a passing word on the pages of Kansas history. Born, 25th day of July 1844 in New Baltimore, Stark county, Ohio, to Lyman and Elizabeth A. (Everhart) HUMPHREY.

His father was born in Connecticut in 1799; was of English descent, his progenitors in America having settled in New England in the early part of the seventeenth century, but when Lyman HUMPHREY was still a young man he removed to the Western Reserve in Ohio, then the Far West," and at Deerfield, Ohio, engaged in the business of a tanner. The Tannery he purchased formerly owned by Jesse GRANT, the father of Gen. U.S. Grant, who had removed to Southern Ohio. Subsequently Lyman HUMPHREY became a lawyer. He was a public-spirited man, served as Colonel of Militia and was highly respected. He died at the age of 54 years. At Niles, Ohio, he married Elizabeth A .Everhart, who was born at Zanesville, Ohio 1812. , daughter of John and Rachel (Jones) EVERHART. Her parents were natives of Pennsylvania, and her father was identified with the iron industry in Niles, Ohio. Mrs. HUMPHREY was possessed of rare intelligence and a strong personality, gifts which her son, Lyman U., inherited in no small degree. She was intensely patriotic. She gave two sons to the service of her country during the civil war, remaining in care of the family home, duties she assumed as a widow at the death of her husband in 1853. Her son, John E. HUMPHREY, served in the Nineteenth Ohio Infantry. He was severely wounded at the battle of Shiloh, in consequence of which he was discharged from the army, but later he reinlisted in the First light artillery of Ohio and therein served until the close of the war. He became a pioneer settler of MONTGOMERY COUNTY, KS, where he died in 1880.

Of the military career of Lyman U. HUMPHREY, mention follows, but of his mother we desire further to observe that she was the inspiration that prompted her sons and spurred them on to success in life. She lived to the remarkable age of eighty-four years, dying at the home of Governor HUMPHREY at INDEPENDENCE, Kansas, in 1896. Lyman U. HUMPHREY obtained a common school education at New Baltimore, Ohio, under the watchful eye of his devoted mother, acquired traits of character, which made him a man of distinction. He had just commenced a course in the high school at Massillon, Ohio, when on Oct.7,1861, at only seventeen years of age, he tendered his services in the defense of the Union, enlisting in Company, Seventy-sixth Ohio infantry. His regiment was attached to the First brigade, First division of the Fifteenth army corps, Army of the Tennessee, and participated in many of the severest battles of the war, among them being Fort Donelson, Shiloh, Corinth, Chickasaw Bluffs, Arkansas Post, Jackson, the Siege of Vicksburg, Lookout Mountain and Missionary Ridge. At Ringgold, GA., Nov. 27, 1863, he received his first and only wound, but remained with his command and ready for duty. He was with his regiment at the battles of Resaca, Dallas, Kenesaw Mountain, the desperate fight at Atlanta, July 22, where the noble McPHERSON fell--then at Ezra Chapel, Jonesboro, and on the march of Sherman to the sea, the campaign up through the Carolinas, including the battle of Bentonville, and, the final surrender of General Joseph E. Johnston's army. He was promoted to first sergeant, second and first lieutenant; commanded a company during the Atlanta campaign and on Sherman's march to the sea, rendering nearly four years of military service before attaining his majority, for he was mustered out of the army at Louisville, KY. July 19,1865, just six days before he was twenty-one years of age.

Lyman U. HUMPHREY developed from an unsophisticated, impulsive youth into a man of self-control, with a practical knowledge of men and affairs. He felt the need of a better education, and entering Mount Union College remained there one term. Later spending one year in the law department of the University of Michigan, but his funds becoming exhausted he decided to go west, and located in Shelby County, MO., where he first taught school and then assisted in publishing the Shelby County Herald. Meanwhile Mr. HUMPHREY continued the study of law, and in 1870 was admitted to the bar in Shelby County, MO.

Early in 1871 he located at INDEPENDENCE, Kans., which place has continued to be his home. Here he became a founder and publisher of the South Kansas Tribune from March 1871, to June 1872. Selling his interest in this newspaper he engaged in the practice of law in partnership with Col. A.M.YORK, with whom he was associated in the practice of law up to Jan 1,1884, when Governor HUMPHREY became the President of the Commercial Bank of Independence, Ks., a bank which he, George T. Guernsey, P.V. Hockett and others had organized in the preceding month of December. In 1891, the bank became the Commercial National Bank. Mr. HUMPHREY resigned as president of the bank to assume the duties of Governor, to which office he was elected in 1888.

Gov. HUMPHREY married Miss Amanda Leonard, Dec.25th, 1872. Mrs. HUMPHREY was the daughter of the late James C. LEONARD, who came to Independence, Kan., from Beardstown, ILL., in which latter place he was a prominent banker. Four sons were born to the union, two dying in infancy, the living are Lyman L. HUMPHREY, born July 3, 1876, and A. Lincoln HUMPHREY, born May 22, 1878. Both these sons were born in Independence, Kan. Lyman L., attended the University of Kansas for two years, and became associated with his father as above mentioned. He married Miss Elsie ANDERSON, daughter of J.M. ANDERSON, a retired merchant of Independence, Kan. Lyman L. is the father of one child, Martha Isabel. He is a Knight Templar Mason and a highly esteemed citizen. A. Lincoln HUMPHREY is a prominent farmer and stockman of Montgomery County, Kansas. Governor HUMPHREY is and has been for years prominent as a Mason, as a member of the Grand Army of the Republic and of the Loyal Legion.

Source note: Name of Book: KANSAS Vol 3,Part 1. Copyright 1912, Standard Publishing Co.,Chicago. No name listed for compiler or author of book

This information contributed by Jeannie Josephson     email address: jj1@rmci.net
transcribed Nov 1999


KSGENWEB INTERNET GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY COPYRIGHT NOTICE: In keeping with the KSGenWeb policy of providing free information on the Internet, this data may be used by non-commercial entities, as long as this message remains on all copied material. These electronic pages cannot be reproduced in any format for profit or other gain. Copying of the files within by non-commercial individuals and libraries is encouraged. Any other use, including publication, storage in a retrieval system, or transmission by electronic, mechanical, or other means requires the written approval of the file's author.