The Stewart family, of
Boyd or at least the family of which the Hon. James E. Stewart is the
representative (for several families bearing the same name are unrelated to
each other) are of Irish descent. James Stewart,
grandfather of James E. Stewart, and father of Colonel Ralph Stewart, came from
Giles County, Virginia, in 1813, and settled on the Sandy in what was
afterwards Lawrence County. Some years after James Stewart came with his family
from Giles County, Virginia. His aged father came out to see him. He was born
and raised in Ireland, and was the earliest ancestor of this branch of the
Stewart family in America, although other branches of the prolific tree had
gone from Ireland to Connecticut, from whence they spread west into
Pennsylvania and Ohio. Colonel Ralph Stewart, the son of James Stewart, was a
young man when he came with his father to the Sandy Valley, for he was born in
1792. In 1829 he married America, daughter of Reuben Canterbury, of Canterbury.
His wife was many years younger than he.
Colonel Stewart owned
and cultivated a large farm on Durbin Creek, near the Sandy River, where he
resided until his death in 1876. He was a man of strict integrity, and was
always regarded as one of the prominent men of his county. While not a seeker
after place, he filled many positions of trust and honor. He raised a large
family of children, who have reflected credit on their good training by him and
their mother. Their eldest son, Hon. James E. Stewart, on coming to age,
studied law, and opened an office at Paintsville in 1855. He
soon after married Miss Cynthia, daughter of Lewis Mayo, one of the leading men
of the Middle Sandy Valley. The war coming on, 1861, found Mr. Stewart a
sympathizer with the Southern side, and for words spoken in its favor he was
sent to Camp Chase, where he remained a prisoner for a year or more. On being
released by exchange, he returned home. Soon after this the oil fever struck
the Sandy Valley, and Mr. Stewart's knowledge of law, and also of business,
enabled him to make quite a snug thing out of the venture. After the war he
bought a handsome property in Louisa, to which place he moved, and where he
still resides. He filled the office of district prosecutor for six years, and
also for the same length of time he was judge of the Criminal Court of his
district. He filled both offices with great satisfaction to the people. He is
now engaged in his law practice, and also in other business. One of his bright
sons was called away by death when just entering on what seemed to be a career
of usefulness. The Stewarts have ever been Democrats of the most pronounced
type, and James E. Stewart is no exception to the rule. They are also
Methodists in religion, Mr. Stewart being a prominent layman in the Methodist
Episcopal Church, South; at Louisa. Colonel Ralph Stewart's widow died December
27, 1886, aged seventy-four years.
John Stewart, a
brother of Colonel Ralph Stewart, married a Miss Burgess, a daughter of an old
settler of that name, and one of the ancestors of the house of Burgess, of Boyd
and Lawrence.
William
Ely, The Big Sandy Valley (Catlettsburg, KY: n.p.,
1887), pp.95-97.
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