MSS 272 Henry Curtis - Page 1 |
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- MSS 272 Henry Barnes Curtis Papers 3- 1/ 2 cubic feet preliminary inventory . COLLECTION SYNOPSIS Provenance: The Ohio Historical Society acquired the Henry Barnes Curtis Papers from D. Blake Battles in 1959 and Timothy H. Bakken in 1975. Clara Ireland processed the collec-tion in March 1980. Property rights: The Ohio Historical Society owns the property rights to this collection. Copyrights: The copyrights to this collection have not been dedicated to the public. Consideration of the requirements of copyright is the responsibility of the author and publisher. Access: This collection is open under the rules and regulations of the Ohio Historical Society. Citation: Researchers are requested to cite collection name, collec5on number and the Ohio Historical Society in all foot-note arrd bibliographic references. Transfer: The following item was transferred to the audio-visual department in April 1980; one receipt from Henking, Allemony and Co. Wholesale Grocers, Gallipolis, Ohio, with picture of building ( lower side of Public Square) on letter-head. Biographical sketch: Henry Barnes Curtis, son of Revolutionary War soldier Zarah and Phally Yale Curtis, was born in 1799 in Champlain, New York. Curtis had three older sisters, an older brother, Hosmer, and a younger brother, Samuel R. The family moved to Ohio in 1809 when Zarah Curtis purchased farm land in Licking County. Henry B. Curtis left the farm in 1817 to live with Hosmer, then a practicing lawyer in Mt. Vernon, Ohio. While studying law Curtis was employed in the office of the Clerk of Knox County Courts, He later became deputy clerk for that court arid then recorder of the Court of Common Pleas. Curtis passed the bar in 1822 and successively partnered with his brother Hosmer, Isaac J. Allen of Mansfield in the early 1840s, Matthew H. Mitchell in the late 1 8 4 0 ~ H.~ C. Scribner in the 1850s and early L860s, and finally his son Henry L. Curtis in 1866. Curtis was admitted to the bar of the U. S. Supreme Court in 1848. Curtis married Elizabeth Hogg of Mt. Pleasant, Ohio, in 1823. Among their several children were Elizabeth Curtis who married John Gershom Plimpton of New York City; Ella Curtis who married Joseph Chambers Devin, an Ohio state senator; and Henry Lambton Curtis who married Lucia B. Chittenden of Keokuk, Iowa, in 1868. Curtis played a significant role in establishing Kenyon College in the 1820s. He served for many years on the board of trustees and the institution awarded him an honorary doctor of law degree in 1881 for his services. i
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Title | MSS 272 Henry Curtis - Page 1 |
Full Text | - MSS 272 Henry Barnes Curtis Papers 3- 1/ 2 cubic feet preliminary inventory . COLLECTION SYNOPSIS Provenance: The Ohio Historical Society acquired the Henry Barnes Curtis Papers from D. Blake Battles in 1959 and Timothy H. Bakken in 1975. Clara Ireland processed the collec-tion in March 1980. Property rights: The Ohio Historical Society owns the property rights to this collection. Copyrights: The copyrights to this collection have not been dedicated to the public. Consideration of the requirements of copyright is the responsibility of the author and publisher. Access: This collection is open under the rules and regulations of the Ohio Historical Society. Citation: Researchers are requested to cite collection name, collec5on number and the Ohio Historical Society in all foot-note arrd bibliographic references. Transfer: The following item was transferred to the audio-visual department in April 1980; one receipt from Henking, Allemony and Co. Wholesale Grocers, Gallipolis, Ohio, with picture of building ( lower side of Public Square) on letter-head. Biographical sketch: Henry Barnes Curtis, son of Revolutionary War soldier Zarah and Phally Yale Curtis, was born in 1799 in Champlain, New York. Curtis had three older sisters, an older brother, Hosmer, and a younger brother, Samuel R. The family moved to Ohio in 1809 when Zarah Curtis purchased farm land in Licking County. Henry B. Curtis left the farm in 1817 to live with Hosmer, then a practicing lawyer in Mt. Vernon, Ohio. While studying law Curtis was employed in the office of the Clerk of Knox County Courts, He later became deputy clerk for that court arid then recorder of the Court of Common Pleas. Curtis passed the bar in 1822 and successively partnered with his brother Hosmer, Isaac J. Allen of Mansfield in the early 1840s, Matthew H. Mitchell in the late 1 8 4 0 ~ H.~ C. Scribner in the 1850s and early L860s, and finally his son Henry L. Curtis in 1866. Curtis was admitted to the bar of the U. S. Supreme Court in 1848. Curtis married Elizabeth Hogg of Mt. Pleasant, Ohio, in 1823. Among their several children were Elizabeth Curtis who married John Gershom Plimpton of New York City; Ella Curtis who married Joseph Chambers Devin, an Ohio state senator; and Henry Lambton Curtis who married Lucia B. Chittenden of Keokuk, Iowa, in 1868. Curtis played a significant role in establishing Kenyon College in the 1820s. He served for many years on the board of trustees and the institution awarded him an honorary doctor of law degree in 1881 for his services. i |
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