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William McClure
William McClure, one of the old settlers of what is now Lawrence County,
came from Giles County, Virginia, where he married Lucretia Chapman, and
settled on the Sandy, about five miles above the Forks, where, or near
where, he continued to reside until his death in 1861. His faithful wife
died the same year. From this pair have descended a large family of
children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren.
Among the first and second generations, from William McClure and wife,
are found some of the prominent people of the valley. Some are well-todo
farmers, while others are teachers and professional men and women. One
grandson is a noted doctor in the interior of Kentucky; another a
highschool teacher; another a professor in a deaf and dumb asylum; and
still another is at the head of the educational department of his native
county. A granddaughter was, for several years, a teacher in a noted
college of the State.
The McClure family has always maintained a respectable standing among the
people of Lawrence and the adjoining country. They were Methodists from
the beginning, and most of them are now in communion with the Methodist
Episcopal Church. They are Republicans in politics; and have contributed
to the material, moral, and intellectual wealth of the valley.
William Ely, The Big Sandy Valley (Catlettsburg, KY: n.p., 1887), pp.245-246.
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