Historic Families of Kentucky by Thomas Marshall Green, Cincinnati, 1889, reprinted Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc. 1959. pp. 62-63. [Fleming county]. 4. Juliet, the third daughter of Colonel McDowell, married Dr. Dorsey, an early physician in Fleming county. She left two daughters, one of whom was the sensible, judicious, excellent Christian woman who became the wife of Hon. L. W. Andrews, whose father, Robert Andrews, was a native of Pennsylvania, of Irish descent. Mr. Andrews himself was born in Fleming county in 1803; educated in the neighboring schools and at Transylvania University; studied law under Judge Roper, and was licensed in 1826. As soon as eligible, he was appointed county attorney of Fleming; then made a gallant and successful race for the legislature in 1834, and was re-elected in 1838. In 1839, he was elected representative in Congress, after a brilliant and heated race, in which, as the Whig candidate, he defeated John C. Mason. In 1841, he was re- elected, and served until 1843; then, having surrendered all his estate, the accumulations of an honorable industry, to discharge obligations incurred for others, he declined a re-election in order to devote himself to his profession. In this he was shrewd, discriminating, industrious, and successful. In 1857, he was elected to the state senate for four years, and was one of those who saved Kentucky to the Union. In 1861, he was again chosen to represent Fleming in the legislature, in which body his course was that of a conservative, firm, patriotic friend of the Union. He resigned, in 1862, to accept a nomination for judge of the circuit court of his district, to discharge the duties of which position, in the precarious situation of the state and people, a man of sense, discretion, character, and decision was required. For six years he held the office, and left it amid the plaudits of a people who recognized his worth. Of quick perceptions, a ready wit, easily adapting himself to the emergencies of the court- house, an amusing, fluent, and most effective public speaker, of marked individuality, and, over and above all, incorruptibly honest, and patriotic, and generous, whether at the bar, in Congress, or upon the bench, Judge Andrews has been distinguished. Fleming county has had no citizen who has exercised a wider influence over her people. His daughter, Juliet, maried William L. Sudduth, an estimable citizen and graceful gentleman of Bath. Their son, W. A. Sudduth, born in 1854, graduated at Center College, in 1874, is at the head of the Fleming bar. McDowell Dorsey Andrews Roper Mason Sudduth = PA Bath http://www.rootsweb.com/~kygenweb/kybiog/fleming/mcdowell.j.txt