SUTTON

JAMES W. SUTTON

page 262:
James W. SUTTON is a descendant of an old American family who were pioneers of the State of Kentucky. Thomas SUTTON, the grandfather of James W. was from Scotland, and settled in Kentucky, where he married Mahala MITCHELL. They settled in Allen County, Ky., and reared a family of eight children: Enoch S., William V., Willis M., William C., Polly Mahala, Frances and Jane. Mr. Sutton moved with his family to Lawrence County, and settled in Mount Vernon Township, near the Big Spring. He died in 1870 at the age of fifty-six years. He was a Republican in his political views, and was a prosperous farmer and an industrious, upright man. He owned 520 acres of excellent land. He was a soldier in the State Militia. His son, James W. Sutton, was born in Missouri, in 1848, on his father's farm. He received a common-school education, and chose for his companion in life, Miss Margaret HILLHOUSE, daughter of Robert and Mary HILLHOUSE. This union resulted in the birth of {the} following children: William R., Archey E., Perley M. and James F. After marriage Mr. Sutton settled on a farm, and in 1880 he moved to his present farm. In his political opinions he is a Republican, and both himself and wife are members of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church, he being an elder in the same. He was at one time a member of the Grange. Mr. Sutton is a native of Lawrence County, and is well known in the county as an uptight and honorable citizen, having made his record at home where all know him. He comes from good old pioneer ancestry, and is a well-informed, industrious citizen.


WILLIAM O. SUTTON

pages 262-263:
William O. SUTTON, who is intimately connected with the farming interests of Mount Vernon Township, is a descendant of an old American family, of English ancestry, and the son of William C. SUTTON, who was born in Kentucky and followed farming in that State until twenty-five years of age. He came to Lawrence County, Mo., about 1844 or 1845, and here married Miss Ellen WILLIAMS, the daughter of Samuel WILLIAMS, who was the son of Judge John WILLIAMS, the first settler of the county, and for whom William's Creek was named. Judge Williams moved from Middle Tennessee in 1831; his widow still resides on the old farm, and is now seventy-eight years of age. The Judge built a log house at the head of Williams' Creek, and made the first improvement in the county. He brought with him eight or ten negroes. He married Miss Elizabeth SMITH, and they became the parents of sixteen children, twelve of whom lived to be married, and seven of whom are now living.: Ellen, John, Samuel, William, Thomas, George, Mary A. and Sarah. Ellen, the eldest of the family, and the mother of William O. Sutton, furnished the facts for this sketch. She was born in Middle Tennessee in 1827, and was four years of age when she came with her parents to Lawrence County. Mr. Williams was a prominent Democrat and a Union man during the war. Four of his sons, John, Samuel, James and William, were in the Union army. Judge Williams and his wife were members of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church. He died at the age of seventy-one in the year 1875. He was considered quite wealthy in those days, and was a man whose judgment was respected. Mr. and Mrs. Sutton reared a family of eight children, but were the parents of fourteen children: J. W., Nancy, Julia A., William, Martha, George, Francis G. and Coral. Mr. Sutton was a religious man, but belonged to no church. He was a man of property, owning 600 acres of land, and was one who stood well in the community. He was in the State Militia during the war, and lived to be fifty-four years of age. He was an old line Whig in politics, and afterward affiliated with the Republican party. Mrs. Sutton is sixty-one years of age, is a woman of remarkable intelligence, and well preserved for her years. Since the death of Mr. Sutton she has kept the family together, and has given each a good common-school education. Her son, W. O. Sutton, was born on his father's farm in 1856, and, like his brothers and sisters, received a good common-school education. He grew to manhood on this farm, and married Miss Alice E. PLUMLEE, the daughter of Zachariah and Margaret J. (JACKSON) PLUMLEE, whose sketch appears elsewhere in this work. Mr. Sutton, like this father, was a Republican in politics, and an industrious farmer. He owned eighty acres of land. His paternal grandfather was a soldier in the Revolutionary War.


From "A Reprint of Goodspeed's 1888 History of Lawrence County; Reprint Lawrence County Section of Goodspeed's Newton, Lawrence, Barry And McDonald Counties History; published by the Goodspeed Publishing Co., in 1888; Reprinted by Litho Printers Of Cassville, Missouri In 1973." as transcribed by JJR.

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