ASHLAND'S LOG HOUSE
Chronology & Historical Review
This article was compiled in 1999 for Ashland's Decorator's
Showcase project by by Teresa Maltin Klaiber
Through the years the Ashland Daily
Independent and history buffs have about a log structure at 621 12th Street.
Not only has it been reported as the oldest housel in Ashland,
Kentucky, but possibly the location of the first meeting of the Kentucky Iron
Coal & Manufacturing stockholders.2 It has been
rumored that the structure was moved from another location. The street number
has also been incorrectly cited as #612 and confused, because of ownership,
with the house at #619 12th Street. A review of articles and legal
documents of Boyd County, Kentucky, reveals the history within the walls of
Ashland's log house.
In May 1999, Mary Jo Burton presented
the structure to the Ashland Board of City Commissioners who moved the log
house to Central Park. The Ashland Daily Independent dutifully wrote about this
historic move citing the structure as a "cabin."3 There is an
inclination to call all log structures cabins. However, distinctions have been
defined by early writers stating that the cabin was of rough log, while the log
house was built to last longer of hewn timber-4 Both types of
structures were often covered with clapboard. Dr. William Fiske57
professor and avid historian, quickly points out that the log house is a
two-story affair with an inner staircase. Thus, for this report, the structure
will be referenced as a log house.
The log house was lifted from its
foundation at #621 Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard [previously 12th Street]
and placed on a new foundation within Central Park.. The plaque on the
left-hand side of the entrance states that this is Ashland's oldest house,
built about 1825 and restored in 1980 by Mr. and Mrs. S. B. Reynolds. S.B. and
Eula Reynolds purchased the property from the Mary Frances Moriarty estate on
July 26th, 1962. 6
During the 1980's the log home was leased
and open to the public in a retail capacity. Several business ventures included
Hidden Treasures Country Crafts { 1989}; Season of Ashland Women's Clothing { 1988}; and Rags to Riches { 1982-1987}.
Rags to Riches also housed Cross Stitch Plus and "The Log House."
Next door, at #619 12th Street, visitors could step back in time at
Pat's Antiques, Etc. 7
In 1979 the property record shows
an application for a building permit to remove and rebuild the rear extension.8
This remodeled section was included in the move to Central Park in 1999.
The property record adds a final notation "completely renovated -
1980."
The James Houck family resided
in the house from 1972 through 1979. Talbert Smith is shown in residence at
#621 from 1966 until 1970. Other resident leasers included David Sparks, Edward
Salyers and Willard S. Grissler. The house was vacant several times during this
period, as well? Mrs. Mary F. Moriarty, widow of John Moriarty lived, next
door, at #619 12th Street until her death.
Mary Francis Moriarty had
inherited the properties of her late husband, in 1944, which included the home
they lived in at #619, #621 12th Street and other business
properties. 10 John H. Moriarty was a prominent businessman in both
Ashland and Ironton. He had been associated with Yellow Poplar Lumber Company
in Ironton, Ohio and after retirement was involved in real estate in Ashland. Il
John Moriarty {son of Patrick &
Margaret Whalen Moriarty) married Mary Francis Sullivan {daughter of William
and Anne} in 1896. While they had no children of their own, John's will
instructed that the residue of his estate, including real estate, at the time
of his wife's death was to be divided among his nieces
and nephews.26 Mary died in December 1960 and was buried beside her
husband in Sacred Heart Cemetery, Ironton. 12
The Moriarty family purchased the land
that became #619 12d1 Street from Julia McMahan13 in
1918. A house moved from the corner of Carter Avenue [#121] and 15th Street
prior to the construction of the Salvation Army building14 to 12th
Street became the Moriarty residence. This activity has added confusion
concerning the history of the log house. John L. Smith of Catlettsburg, wrote
that "one of the oldest houses in the city...the property of the late John
Moriarty ...at 619, 12th Street at one time was the home of the
parents of Mrs. E. H. Townsend and Miss Poage ...Virginia branch of the
Poages... Smith most likely meant the frame covered log house at #621 12th
Street since it was under the same ownership in 1944. This writer's
theory that the two assigned street numbers were often confused is further
validated since Mrs. E H. Townsend and Miss Poage were the children of Hugh
Calvin Poage [s/o Thomas Hoge Poage and Nancy Frame Poage] and will be
referenced further in this report.
Julia McMahan, elderly widow of Michael resided at #621 and
was the Moriarty neighbor for several years. It is apparent that while they
were neighbors, Julia McMahan had not discussed the longevity of her residence with
the Moriarty family. When Mrs. Moriarty was interviewed, during Notation:
bro-in-laws John A. Kelly, R.C. Daggett, Michael Dowling. her ownership, about the age of the house at #621, she stated
she would rather not make a guess- 16 To assist Julia in her later
years son J. William and a maid Jane Pennington resided with herl7 in
the {log} house. Mrs. McMahan died December 19, 1923. 18 For a short time after her
death19, son William McMahan and R. L. Gilley continued to reside in
the home- 20 William died December 26, 1925. The remaining heirs
were half-sister Ella {Derrick} and brother Edward McMahan. 21 Edward,
a bachelor resided in Lebec, Kern County, California. The property was sold to
Ashland National Bank.22
John W. Moriaty purchased the property
and log house for a mere $1.00 and the assumption of all taxes which would be
due from National Bank, on January I I th, 1927 23 This
was a good real estate purchase adjoining their own home at #619. The property
was then rented to Mrs. Chatta Adkins who resided in the house until
approximately 1932.24 The house was vacant for several years when
once again it was rented to George W. Conley {1937-3825}. Claren
White Smith lived one year in the home and Homer Dotson was in residency 26
when John W. Moriarty died.
Julia McMahan and her husband,
Michael [1818-1885] purchased the property, including the log house. at #621, in
September 1868, for $500.00 from John Paul and Catherine H. Jones.27 The
property, at this time, was described as being on 5th Street.27
When the McMahan's purchased the property, they had four
children: Edward, John, Frank and Ella. Shortly after taking up residency in
the log house at #621 5th Street son William [186919251 was born28.
The 1891 Special Census for Ashland, Kentucky shows Julia McMahon in block 24
between 1 and 12th with five other members in her family. [The 1897
Ashland City Directory gave the address as #617. This is the only citation
located with that number designation.]
Michael McMahan had an increase in tax
rates from a $600 value in 1872 to $1000 in 1874. This appears to confirm that
the house was encased with a frame covering by McMahan 29 improving its value. As the
town grew, they were still considered on the fringe of Ashland, with the
earliest insurance maps stopping just short of the area where they owned. The
family was in residence, in the log house, when Kentucky Legislature recognized
Ashland as a city allowing for the election of city officers in 1876. They saw
electric lighting furnished to the city in 1889 and the purchase of Central Park
from KIC & Mfg in 1900. The 1907 Sanborn Insurance Maps, more importantly,
show the home, complete with stoop, an addition in the rear, and several tiny
out-buildings. Note: The street was originally named 5th' Street
then 12th Street and finally Martin Luther King Blvd.
The McMahan lot bounded by 5th street and
Montgomery is also marked, on original surveys created by engineer, M. T.
Hilton. The map shows John Paul Jones owning property to the west and
"Widow Jones" with property bounding J.P. Jones.30 The
deed from Jones to McMahan cites improvements and appurtenances. Accordingly
improvements are an addition made to property amounting to more than repairs-31
Appurtenances is an indication that a structure was on location.
John Paul Jones purchased the
property from Kentucky Iron, Coal and Manufacturing Company for $600.00 in
March of 1868. This deed included the property sold to McMahan and the J.P.
Jones lot bordering Widow Sarah Jones property. Verbiage included privileges
and appurtenances as well as KIC's standard statement that there would be no
sale of ardent spirits and other intoxicating drinks on the premises. The sale
was duly recorded in the KIC sale of lots ledger now archived in the Boyd
County Library,32 and the KIC Map Land Book page 133 describes it as
300 feet from Bath Avenue to Montgomery, thence to Mrs. Jones Line on Bath
& Montgomery.
John Paul Jones was born in 1823 in Pennsylvania and
described as a farmer.33 He married Ann Amanda Jane Pogue [d/o William Lindsey and Ann McCormick
Poage] on 3 February 1847. John and Ann had nine children. Ann died on 16
September 1865.35 He then married Catherine {1839-1907}. Since Jones
only held the property for a few months there is no indication that he ever
resided in the log house on 5th Street. When one of his daughter's,
Harriet Milton Jones, died in May 1935 the obituary in the Ashland Daily
Independent stated that she was born on the "old John Paul Jones farm west
of Ashland...part of the original farm occupied by the west works of the
American Rolling Mill Company."36 It does not appear that he moved while
transacting the street sale.
There were two John Paul Jones -
pioneers in the development of Ashland. John Paul Jones who sold the property
at 5th Street interacted with "widow' Sarah Jones. Members of
this Jones family, in Wisconsin, sold the adjoining property to John Paul in
1872. 37 Sarah Jones, of Union Town, Fayette County, Pennsylvania
had purchased property in May 1851, from Able Case described as adjoining Mrs.
Nancy Poage's and to the lower corner of Richard Jones line. ..on the waters
of Long Run...a few yards north of east of Bethesda Church. 38
Richard Jones, cited in widow Jones
deed, and his wife Jane {nee Coil) were the parents of the 2nd John
Paul Jones [born April 25, 1830, Ohio]. This John Paul and wife Cecelia {nee
Veyssie - m. Nov. 29, 1855, Law. Co., OH} also purchased lots in Ashland in
1868 from KIC&Mfg including land between 1 Ith and 24th Street39
on Railroad and Broadway. One of the stipulations of KIC was the
construction oftwo brick buildings.40 41 The lots on Broadway were later
described as the Jones Block and conveyed to Jane at Richard's death along with
the brick structures.42 The remainder of his large holdings were
divided among heirs in 1860 by a court order in Greenup County, Kentucky.43
John Paul Jones, with interest in property on 5th Street,
mother-in-law, as cited earlier, was a McCormick John Paul Jones, son of Richard,
step-father was a McCormick {the widow Jane Coil Jones having married Samuel
McCormick after Richard's death}. Compound research frustrations with the
purchase of 1505 1/2 hundred acres by KIC and Poage's vast land
holdings with disputes; tracking the lineage of one log structure becomes
tedious at best.
PART 11
A small clue showing the KIC holdings,
including the property we know as #621, is a manuscript in the holdings of the
Historical Society at the Boyd County Public Library, written by J.C. Bayless44.
Bayless indicated that Thomas Hoge Poage was said to have built a two story log
house, afterwards sheeted on the outside, at now about Montgomery Avenue and 12th
Street, later moved across Montgomery Avenue when Ashland streets were
laid out. Bayless statement has some validity. The house was indeed built by a
Poage, as will be shown further in this report - but was not built by Thomas
Hoge Poage. It is easy to confuse the many Poage family members, especially
since more than one crossed the threshold of the log house. However, Thomas
Hoge Poage was the father of Hugh Calvin Poage45 and grandfather to
Mrs- E. H. {Ernest H. } Townsend cited earlier in this report. His spouse Nancy
{nee Frame} being the same bounding the lands of Widow Sarah Jones in 1851.
The majority of the deed transactions
made by Kentucky Iron and Coal Manufacturing are found in Greenup County,
Kentucky deed book L in 1853 and 1854. KIC purchased 15 1/2 acres of
land from Hugh Calvin and George Samuel Poage on March 27, 1854. But the parcel
of land referred to as #621 5th/ 12th Street, Ashland, Kentucky, in this
report, was not officially recorded until 1891 in Boyd County.46 The
Poage's purchased the property on October 5, 1853 from their mother Nancy.47
When it was sold to KIC the property is described as being near Bethesda
Church and in possession of Mrs. Nancy Poage. The deed cites it as a farm and
that "the company binds itself to sell to Hugh C. Poage and George S.
Poage a lot on which the present dwelling house now occupied by Mrs. Nancy
Poage may stand.... as soon as lots may be laid off and got ready for sale
provided a street does not run where it stands..."48 A review
of city minutes gave no indication of any structures being moved when the
streets were laid out.
While KIC owned the property, the
leaders of Ashland were meeting regularly, creating ordinances for the welfare
of the community. In August 1858 the Ashland Board of Trustees made it unlawful
for any stove pipe to pass through a floor, side or roof of a building without
entering a flue which had to be on the inside and brick laid flat with the
joint and fille and the inside well plastered,"
Nancy A. Poage purchased the 15 1/2
acres on 30 November 1846 from Abel Case, being in line with Richard Jones land
and including appurtenances" Her property, as stated earlier, is cited in
the widow Sarah Jones deed in 1851.
Nancy, who had been active in
the Inductive Seminary 51 , was left a widow in January 1839. 52 Her husband Thomas Hoge Poage died in Victoria, Texas with
yellow fever, leaving Nancy with several small children
including Hugh Calvin [baptized November 1829?3 Bethesda Church].
Hugh Calvin was said to have been born within Poage Settlement. According to
The Descendants of Robert and John Poage, Volume One, 1954, page 210 Thomas Hoge
Poage lived on the Ohio adjoining his father's property. 54 A later
transaction of the heirs of Thomas also confirm that he resided on
the bank of the Ohio next to George Poage55
Since we find no indication
that Nancy paid any tax from the time of her husband's death until her purchase
of the Case property in 184656 we must assume that her earlier tax's
were embedded in that of the large Poage holdings, taxed to heirs of George
after his death in 1821. The 15 h acres described on the waters of Long Run
appear in her name from 1847 until 1854. During the years that Nancy owned the
property the value increased in value from 360 to 750.
Another informative article appeared in
the Ashland Daily Independent on February 23, 1930 after the death of Mrs. Sarah
E. {Davenport} Poage. The article says the Poage pioneers George, Robert and
Robert Jr. located land and built one house near where Twenty-eighth Street is
now {1930), another at about Eleventh Street and another down about where
Armco plant is now located. Sarah Davenport married Hugh Calvin Poage on
January 27th, 1853. The day after the marriage they went to the home
of her husband's mother, which was described in one article on Bath Avenue. This old
place was a log house and in it was a winding stairway...the old home...is still standing. It is
located near the home of Mrs. Wm. M. Salisbury... [1100 Bath Avenue]. It has been weather
boarded and modernized to some extent..." While the log structure we know
as #621 does not have a "winding stairway" the existing stairway is
unusual. Standing on the landing you may take two steps up to the left or two
steps up to the right to the room on the right. Or you may turn around the
banister corner and take two steps up to a room that leads to the upper outside front
door.
Nancy did not sell the property
to her sons until October 1853. This, first hand story, places a two story structure, complete with staircase within the 15 acres prior to the sale.
1853 was a beehive of activity. Besides
the wedding earlier in the year, a group of leading citizens met at the home of
Mrs. Hugh Calvin Poage under the leadership of William T. Nicholls to raise
money to buy the right-of- way for a rail road to run to Poage Settlement. The
outcome was the formation of Kentucky Iron and Coal Rail Road with Mr. Nicholls
presiding over local work. 57 According to notations gleaned from
some of the gentlemen mentioned, this was the 2nd meeting of most of
the group. 58
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Calvin Poage are
said to have entertained, the promoters of the project after the land company
formed and the city named, with a dinner at the old home place of Mrs. Nancy
Allen Poage, mother of Mr. Hugh Calvin Poage. Again the structure is described
as a weather boarded jog home ... back of Bath Avenue across the street from
the John Russell home on 12th and Bath." The description is a
bit deceptive as the structure on 12th was placed on the lot closer
to Montgomery which could easily be, described as back of Bath Avenue.
After Poage's sons sold the property
Boyd County Circuit shows a
judgement was made over the dispute of lots. The outcome was a sale of pan of
lot 4 which was on Front Street near Broadway in April 1866 60 61 dispelling
the rumored stories that the log house was moved from near the river edge to 12th Street, when it appears Nancy moved from 12th to Front near
Broadway. Two years later, Nancy purchased lot 37, the northerly corner of Bath
and Third Street from Kentucky Iron and Coal.62
Like Nancy Poage, the earlier owner of
the property, Abel Case, was interested in education, having founded the first
high school in the Beech Grove section. 63 Case a Presbyterian
minister,64 of Greenup County, purchased the 15 h acre property on 30th August
1845 from Rev. Charles Phillips of Scott County, Kentucky. This deed describes
the property at the corner of George Poage's land. [George also owned the
property surrounding & including Bethesda Church. Bethesda Church was
accepted out and his heirs sold the remainder to KIC in 1854.65] It included
all premises, improvements,
rights and privileges. 66 Able Case died in 1851 at the age of 39.67
His widow Martha remarried to J.M. Burke. 68 Daughter Helen
Case sold another portion of the estate beginning near the Academy to John
Means in 1872. 69
Charles Phillips, of Clark County,
Kentucky, purchased the property from James and Jemima Poage of Cabell County,
Virginia in 1839.70 The property was described as near the Ohio
River adjacent to Bethesda Church lot. The property contained 24 % acres at
this time and included a house and barn where the said Poages formerly lived.[1]
Bethesda Church lot donated by George Poage Jr. contained a brick
structure built in 1828 "just back of present Bayless School. Bayless Sch001[2]
was located 10th and Central Avenue,
placing the log structure property in the Beech Grove Section, south of Central near the academy
property and the end of Bath Avenue.
A story appearing in The History
of Ashland, Kentucky 1786 to 195472 states that Phillips began
building a house for a bride-to-be but the lady broke the engagement and then
the house was badly damaged by fire so that he resigned his pastorate in 1835
and returned to Central Kentucky as a bachelor. 73 Abel Case
purchased what is described as a partially burned brick house at the end of
Bath Avenue74 later known as the McKenzie estate. This house still
standing today became part of Helen Case's estate This writer can only wonder if
both Phillips and Case may have lived in the log structure while the brick home
was under construction.
James Poage married Jemima McCormick [d/o James McCormack] in
1821,75 in Cabell County [W]Virginia. 70 James was the
brother of William Poage who married Ann McCormick. 77 Both James
and brought their brides to
Greenup County and were very active in the Presbyterian Church. Two of James
and Jemima's sons were baptized as infants in the original log Bethesda Church
in August of 182778. Daughter, Sarah Jane, was baptized in 182979
in the newly built brick church which was described as adjacent to James
property line.
The Poages who acquired interest
in a portion of the Savage Grant in Cabell County were dismissed from Bethesda
and moved to farms in that area close to other McCormick family members.
William and his wife also moved to Cabell County. James and Jemima described , the
house and barn their tiny children were born in, when they sold to Phillips.
Both Poage brothers became early elders of the
Western Church of the Greenbrier Presbytery which was formed in Cabell County,go
before moving yet again westward to Missouri.
William and James were children
of Robert and Mary Hopkins Poage. Robert, from Augusta County, Virginia, was a
surveyor and died in 1810. Robert's will written in Greenup County was
abstracted by the Boyd County Abstract Company81 and states "as
the situation of my land is in a difficult situation it is my will that my wife
shall compromise disputes, , buy land...., or sell any other property, in short
it is my will that my wife shall have the same power to manage my estate in all
respects as I could do." This statement describes the land holdings that
would be involved with KIC and the formation of Ashland in very simple words.
The boundaries and claims of both Robert and George Poage were brought before
the courts several times and deeds needed clarified as time progressed-
It is said that Robert did not come
to Kentucky until 1800. He is shown on the 1806 Greenup County tax lists. 82
Son James appears on the 1820 Census for Greenup County prior to his
marriage to Jemima. It is easy to assume that James left his father's home,
creating his own after he returned to Greenup County with his bride.
CONCLUSIONS
The brass plaque historically marking
the log house in Central Park indicates that it was built around 1825. It could
easily be assumed that the house was built by James Poage between 1821 and the
baptism of his child in 1827. Verification can not be made because of the loss
of tax records for this time frame. The first written mention of the house is
in the Phillips deed in 1839.
Deed descriptions of the property place
it within Beech Grove, near the academy and touching what has become known as
the Bayless School lots. A description, earlier in this report, citing 11th
Street at the end of Bath Avenue appears to be the most accurate. Thus the
house moved within Beech Grove to 5th Street after the streets were
laid out and moved a 2nd time to Central Park.
Modifications, such as the siding in 1872, can easily be
determined. However, one can see many other alterations to the structure[1999]-
Donald Hutslar30, retired lecturer with the Department of
Architecture at Ohio State University, and renowned author on the origin and
development of log architecture in Ohio, graciously has reviewed photographs of
the structure. Mr. Hutslar points out that many of the logs have been replaced.
In his report Hutslar states that
the staircase reminded him of those of the 1830's or 40s in Ohio. He
states "I have a feeling that the staircase is original but not the
arrangement with the doorways to the bedrooms. That 2nd floor
doorway was certainly a window....a hunch that the staircase led to the
landing, then turned " 83 His observations place the
original staircase within 5/7 years of the brass plaque and research in this
report. Hutslar goes on to say that "the spindles remind me of the
1870s... It is not hard for readers to make the leap that when McMahan sided
the outside of the structure he also did "renovations inside the home.
Having viewed the structure and
taken photos one of the strongest questions this researcher had concerned a
crosswall showing by the front entrance door. Donald Hutsler commented that it
was necessary because of the length of the the structure and a "fairly
common technique in western Ohio ...mid 1830s to 1860s. Once again, his
statements place the earliest date within a few years of our research data.
When commenting on the brass plaque Hutsler stated "I would feel better if
it was ten years later, though that is relative to Ohio examples." With so
many modifications and moving of the structure this researcher is confident that
we are in the right time frame.
The interior of the house has
been modified many times. It is now covered with dry wall making any historical
study nearly impossible without damaging this "cover." The windows
have been replaced, the upper door most likely was a window converted to a
door, possibly when the staircase was modified. The fireplaces have been
modified and grates changed with time.
The most basic question asked by Mr.
Hutsler was concerning a separate kitchen or summer kitchen. When this research
began Mr. James Powers, director of the library, and others were under the
impression that the rear extension was a much newer modification. However,
review of insurance maps and KIC maps show the house on site at 5d1 Street
with extension, leading this researcher to believe it senned for many years as
the kitchen. It may have been a separate structure before Nancy Poage acquired
it. The site on 5th street has been bulldozed and street adjustments
made in such a manner that one cannot find remains of early foundation
materials.A house with such a long history is allowed to keep a few
secrets.
ASHLAND'S LOG HOUSE END NOTES
1. Oldest House
in Ashland Puzzle Is Unsolved;..." Ashland Daily Independent clipping,
undated, Arnold Hanner Coilection, Boyd County Public Library.
2.
A History of Ashland, Kentucky 1786 to 1954, page 60.
3.
"City Oks MovingCabintoPaik"Ash1and Daily Independent,
May 21, 1999.
4.
The Architecture of Migratjon„ Donald Hutslar, 1986.
5.
Dr. Wiilliam Fiske, Muskingum Coiiege, New Concord, OH i
9935 oral interview with researcher.
6.
Boyd County, KY deed book 384-265.
7.
Ashland City Directory Collection, Boyd County Public
Library, Ashland, KY.
8.
Ashland, KY, Property Record Card I of 2, 18111600
00120621, Boyd County Public Library, cabinet 265.
9.
Ashland City Directory collection 1989-1960, Boyd
County Public Lirary, Ashland, KY.
10.
Boyd County Will Book 6 page 321-
11.
Moriarty Obituary, Ashland Daily Independent, November
18, 1943.
12. Moriarty Obituary, Ashland
Daily Independent, December 29, 1960.
13.
Boyd County, KY deed book 69 page 551.
14.
Historic
Preservation Plan For Ashland, KY, Edward A. Chappell, 1978, page 117.
15.
The Early History of Boyd County, John L. Smith,
reading before Poage Chapter DAR, 15 Feb. 1944.
16-
"Oldest House In Ashland Puzzle Is Unusolved;-.." Ashland Daily
Independent, clipping, undated Arnold Hanner Collection, Boyd County Public
Library-
17.
United States Federal Census, Boyd County, KY, Ashland
house 622.
18.
Kentucky Vital Statistic Index-
19.
Boyd County, KY Will book 3 page 301.
20. Ashland City Directory 1924-25.
21.
Boyd County, KY deed book 110 page 125.
22.
Boyd County, KY Deed book 110 page 120.
23, Boyd
County, KY Deed book 125 page 193-
24. Ashland, KY City Directories
1929, 1930, 1933-34.
25, Ashland,
KY City Directory 1937-38.
26.
Ashiand, KY City Directories 1942, 1944.
27.
Boyd County, KY deed book 7 page 20.
28.
Boyd County, KY 1870 Annotated Census, Evelyn S.
Jackson, house 186/186.
29. "Oldest
House In Ashland Puzzle Is Unsolved;...'t Ashland Daily Independent clipping,
undated, Arnold Hanner collection, boyd County Public Library-
30.
M.T. Hilton Survey, Boyd County Public Library,
Special Collections A-37.
31.
Black 's Law Dictionary, 3rd Edition. page
927.
32.
Kentucky Iron and Coal Sale of Lots and Lands, page
"J. Paul Jones I acre range 6 W." Boyd County Public Librany Archive
Collection.
33.
Federal Census Boyd County, KY 1860, Annotated , Evelyn
s. Jackson.
34.
Descendants of Robert and John Poage, Volume One, 1954,
page 941 ,
35. ibid.
36.
Jones Obituary, Ashland Daily Independent, May 21,
1935.
37.
Boyd County, KY, deéd book S page 276.
38.
Greenup County, KY deed book K page 485.
39- ofAsh1and," May 3, 1936.
40.
Greenup County, KY deed book L page 378.
41.
Boyd Counti, KY deed book 3 page 454.
42.
Boyd County, KY will book I page 156.
43.
Greenup County, KY deed book I page 145,
44.
J.C. Bayless, Ashland, Histoyy, OHR vf, Boyd County
Public Library, undated.
45.
Descendants of Robert and John Poage, volume One, 1954,
page 275.
46.
Boyd County, Ky deed book 19 page 380.
47.
Greenup County, KY deed book L page 120.
48.
Boyd County, Ky deed book 19 page 381.
49
City o f Ashland Board of Trustees Minutes, Book I page 9.
50
_ Greenup County, KY deed book H page 444
51.
History o f Ashland, KY 1786 to 1954, Centennial
Souvenir, page 6.
52.
Descendants of Robert and John Poage, volume One, 1954,
page 275 and 210.
53- Bethesda
Church record* Eastern Kentucky References, Evelyn S. Jackson, p. 23.
54.
Descendants of Robert andJohn Poage, Volume One, 1954, page 275 and 210.
55- Boyd
County, KY deed book 4 page 253.
56.
Greenup County, KY tax i 839-1857, AGEE microfilm V20-0i45-
57. "Ashland
- On Ohio," R.C. Hall- OHRF, Boyd County Public Library, cabinet 263. 58-
Original notations, R.C. Hali, OHRF, Boyd County Pubiie Library, cabinet 263.
_59_ History
of Ashland 1786-1938, Ashland Daily Independent, Feb. 6, 1938.
60.
Boyd County, KY deed book 3 page 59.
61.
Boyd County, KY Circuit Court Minutes, microfilm
C0989460.
62.
Boyd County, KY deed book 3 page 562.
63.
History of Ashland, K}' 1786 to 1954, Centennial
Souvenir, page 6.
64.
| 850 Greenup County, KY Fderal Census house 558,
65. Greenup
County, KY deed book L page 19766. Greenup County, KY deed book 11 page 264.
67.
Ashland's Past A Pictorial History ! 776-1976 page 62,
68.
Boyd County, KY deed book 5 page 187.
69.
Boyd County, KY deed book I page 188.
70.
Greenup County, KY deed book G page 152.
71.
A History of Ashland, Kentucky 1786 to 1954, page 6.
72.
Ibid page 60.
73.
Ibid.
74.
Ibid.
75.
The Descendants of Robert and John Poage Woodworth,
Volume 1 page 139.
76.
Cabell County [WV Virginia Marriages 1809-1850, Carrie
Eldridge, page 34.
77, ibid
78.
Eastern Kentucky References, Evelyn Jackson and
William Talley, page 22.
79.
Ibid page 23.
80.
Cabell County Annals and Families, George Selden
Wallace, page 308.
81.
Boyd County Abstract Co., May 1895, R.I.. Brown,
Secretary, Original Records, Cabinet 264, Boyd County Public Library.
82., Greenup
County, Kentucky Tax Lists 1806, compiled from Original records in the Boyd
County Historical Society...collection, winder Genealogy Room.. -Boyd County
Public Library.
83. Donald
A- Hutslar, Worthington, OH, correspondence to compiler, 11 December, 1999.