
JOHN C. MACKEY, who
resides on his farm on section 31, Bloomfield Township, Johnson County,
is not only a competent farmer, but
he is a
contractor and builder of high repute and conducts
an extensive business in that line. Alabama is his native State, and he
was born
August 12,
1847. His father was James L. MACKEY, who was born, reared and
married in South Carolina, where he had been brought
up on a
farm. His parents removed to Tennessee, where the grandfather
of our subject continued his occupation as a farmer, and in due
time died.
James MACKEY
obtained a fair education in the schools of his day.
He married Sarah Jane DURAN, who was also a
native of South
Carolina,
and they
subsequently left their native State, and at different times lived in
Alabama, Mississippi and Tennessee. From the
latter State
they came to this in the fall of 1861, coming hither by rail. Mr.
MACKEY had but little means at that time, and first settled on
rented land
in Union County. After awhile he bought railroad land, which he sold
after living on it for a time and improving it, and his next
and last
move was to Texas, where he died, his wife also dying there in the same
year. They were the parents of seven children: Rebecca,
who is
married and lives in Texas; William, who is a dairy farmer in Texas;
James T., a resident of Dallas, Tex.; John C.; Louis C., now in Dallas,
Tex.;
Monroe, also in Dallas; and Elizabeth, the wife of John BENSON, of
Dongola, Union County.
John C.
MACKEY is the fourth child of the family. Brought up on a farm, he
early became accustomed to work. He applied himself diligently
to his books
and made the most of his opportunities to obtain an education in the
common schools. At the age of eighteen, the sturdy
self-reliant
youth began life in earnest, with good habits, health, strength and a
well-balanced mind for capital. He had a decided taste for
mechanics,
was very skillful in handling tools, and he naturally turned his
attention to the trade of a carpenter, and in due time mastered
every detail
of the calling. He then spent some time farming on some land he owned
in Union County, which he finally sold, and then
bought his
present farm of eighty- five acres in Bloomfield Township. This is
supplied with ample improvements, its fields are well tilled,
and the
whole place shows the best of care. Besides superintending his farm,
Mr. MACKEY conducts an extensive business at Vienna as a
builder, has
erected many of the most substantial houses in that village and in the
county, and always has all the contracts he cares to fill.
They are
always carried out to the letter, and he is known among his many
friends and acquaintances as a man of scrupulous integrity, who
is
straightforward and above board in all his transactions. He is a
public-spirited citizen, who uses his influence for the good of the
community,
and as a member of the School Board -- a position he also held while a
resident of Union County -- he seeks to promote the cause
of education
in this locality. Politically, he favors the Republican party.
The marriage
of our subject with Miss Nancy Jane KEITH, a native of Johnson County,
was solemnized in 1869, and has been a union as
happy as
that usually allotted to mortals. It has brought to them eleven
children: Almira Belle, who died in infancy; Addison, who died at
the age of
eighteen years, and Willie K., James Franklin, Mary Ellen, Cora E.,
Lillie W., Oliver, Annie, John and Ethel. These children brighten
the home and
gladden the hearts of their parents, who are giving them a good
practical training in life's lessons, and affording them the best
educational
advantages within their means.
transcribed by Nan Starjak
Source:
The Biographical Review of Johnson, Massac, Pope and Hardin
Counties
Chicago: Biographical Publishing Co., 1893
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