The Times of Long Ago, Barren County, Kentucky. By Franklin Gorin. John P. Morton & Company Incorporated, 1929. Published originally in the Glasgow Weekly Times, 1870's. p. 124. JAMES M. CULP, the brother of Daniel Culp, who erected the first tanyard in Glasgow, came here at an early day in this century. Another brother, Josiah, also moved here a few years later. They were all good tanners; they came from Bourbon County, Ky. Of their parentage or education we are almost ignorant. They were industrious, frugal, and deeply pious; men of more than ordinary mind; quiet, humble citizens, highly esteemed and worthy of the trust and confidence of their associates. James M., the subject of this notice, never married; he was a local Methodist preacher. His brothers were also members of the same church, and we believe local preachers. They were remarkable for their strict honesty, veracity and fair dealing. They had many apprentices, all of whom became worthy citizens, and most of them members of the Methodist church from the holy teachings and example daily set before them by that truly good man, James M. Culp. One of them, the Rev. Eli B. Crane, was an eloquent and profound, theologian, a pious man, and useful citizen. Culp Crane = Bourbon-KY http://www.rootsweb.com/~kygenweb/kybiog/barren/culp.jm.txt