Memorial Record of Western Kentucky, Lewis Publishing Company, 1904, pp 799-801 [Henderson] JOHN WATKINS CROCKETT, who for many years was connected with the bar of Henderson, was born in Jessamine county, Kentucky, May 17, 1818, and died in Madisonville, June 20, 1874. His father, John W. Crockett, was a native of the same county and was a farmer by occupation. His grandfather, Joseph Crockett, was born near Charlotteville, Virginia, and was colonel of a Virginia regiment during the war of the Revolution. In 1827 he emigrated to Kentucky and took an active part in the organization of the state, serving as United States marshal for a time. The first of the family to come to America was of French-Huguenot extraction, members of the Huguenot band having fled from their native France in the days of the persecution and sought safety in Ireland, whence their descendants came to America. The name at that time was spelled Croquetaine. The sons of this family were seafaring men, and engaged in this calling in connection with the Maury family before locating in Virginia. The mother of our subject was Louisa (Bullock) Crockett, of Jessamine county, Kentucky, a member of the prominent family of that name in this state. John Watkins Crockett was educated in the common schools of Jessamine county, Kentucky, and in Hancock county, Illinois, while residing there with his sister, Mrs. Hannah (Crockett) Bell. At the age of twenty-one he returned to Hopkinsville, Kentucky, where he read law with his cousin, Joseph Crockett, an attorney of renown, who later became one of the justices of the supreme bench of California. Mr. Crockett was admitted to practice at Paducah, Kentucky, and removed to Henderson a short time before the inauguration of the Civil war. His sympathies were with the south, and his conscientious convictions of the supreme right of the states to sever their union with the national government led him to give his influence and support to the Confederacy. He was sent as a delegate to the convention held in Bowling Green, Kentucky, and there was elected to represent the second congressional district in the Confederate congress. He maintained this position during the greater part of the war, devoting his time and abilities to advancing the cause of the south, and when the war was over returned to Henderson, where he resumed the practice of law. To that work he devoted his energies until 1872, when failing health caused him to leave the bar and he returned to Madisonville, where he died in 1874. Mr. Crockett was twice married. He first wedded Mrs. Smedley, and of this union there are two surviving children,--John W. And Mrs. Lucy (Crockett) Thornberry, of Montgomery, Alabama. For his second wife Mr. Crockett chose Miss Louisa Ingram, daughter of Wyatt H. Ingram, a merchant of Henderson, Kentucky. The Ingrams came to this state from Virginia at a very early day. The only surviving child of the second marriage is Ingram Crockett, who is teller in the Planters' Bank of Henderson, and who, aside from his duties in the bank, gives much attention to authorship, having written many beautiful poems which have appeared in such standard publications as the Youth's Companion and Frank Leslie's, and have also been published for distribution and sale. In concluding the sketch of John Watkins Crockett it is but just to give an account of his forensic ability, which has seldom been equaled. He was by nature an orator. He possessed a vigorous intellect, wide information and keen wit, and his command of language was such as to make his speech apt and fitting at all times. Careful in arranging and preparing his cases, he was never at a loss for forcible and appropriate argument to sustain his position and he met in the arena of the court-room and in public debate such men as Archibald Dixon, Lazaus W. Powell and others of like caliber, and rarely was worsted in the combat. He was of a genial, generous nature, courteous and frank and ready at all time to aid the unfortunate and needy. Though thirty years have passed since he was laid in the tomb his memory is still enshrined in the hearts of many friends, and his virtues and goodness still live in the recollection of those who knew him. Crockett Croquetaine Maury Bullock Bell Smedley Thornberry Ingram Dixon Powell = Jessamine-KY VA France Ireland Hancock-IL CA AL http://www.rootsweb.com/~kygenweb/kybiog/henderson/crockett.jw.txt