|
Isham Green Harris,
born in Franklin County in 1818, moved to Paris as a
young boy and was a member of both state houses
before he was elected governor in 1859.
Harris became Tennessee's only Confederate governor
and served as brigadier general aide-de-camp to
Albert Sidney Johnston, Braxton Bragg and Joseph E.
Johnston. He served 20 years in the U.S. Senate and
was president pro tempore of the Senate until his
death in 1897.
James Davis Porter,
born in Paris in 1828, was elected to the state
legislature in 1859. Porter helped organize the Army
of Tennessee and was Gen. B.F. Cheatham's chief of
staff. He was elected governor for two terms
beginning in 1874.
Porter later served as Assistant Secretary of State,
Minister to Chile, president of the N.C. & St. L.
Railway, president of the University of Nashville
and chancellor of Peabody College. In 1912, Porter
died at his Dunlap Street home in Paris.
Thomas Clarke Rye,
born in Camden in 1863, moved to Paris in 1902. He
was governor during World War I, serving from
1915-19. Rye became a Chancery Court judge in 1919
and served 20 years. He died at his North Poplar
Street home in Paris in 1953.
Other political figures from Henry County include
former governor and state legislator,
Ned R. McWherter, who
built a home near the bridge over Kentucky Lake
which bears his name.
Gen. John Dewitt Clinton
Atkins, the only man to return to the U.S.
Congress after serving in the Confederate Congress,
chaired the House Committee on Appropriations and
later became Commissioner of Indian Affairs.
John Wesley Crockett,
the eldest son of the legendary David Crockett, took
his father's old Congressional seat in 1837.
Henry Countians who have had an impact on education
include Dudley M. Clements
who began the nation's first vocational agriculture
program following the passage of the Smith-Hughes
Act.
Edwin Wiley Grove, who
headed the Paris Medicine Company and Grove
Laboratories which produced "Grove's Tasteless Chill
Tonic," was the namesake of E.W. Grove Henry County
High School, Tennessee's first privately endowed
public high school.
University presidents from the county include
Dr. C.C. "Sonny" Humphreys'
Memphis State University; Dr.
Thomas D. Jarrett, Atlanta University;
Dr. Mordecai Johnson,
Howard University; and Dr.
Joe Morgan, Austin Peay State University.
Well known musicians from Henry County include
Bobby Jones,
award-winning gospel performer;
Keith Lancaster,
founder of the Acapella Music Group;
Harry Neal, member of
the duo-piano team of Nelson & Neal; and
Jackie de Shannon, pop
music singer.
Those in the country music field include performers
Rattlesnake Annie, Ricky
Revel and Hank
Williams, Jr., as well as writer and manager
Merle Kilgore.
Other entertainers include
Buster Jones, host of the television program,
Soul Unlimited; Cherry Jones,
Tony Award-winning actress; and
Ula Love, Hollywood
starlet and member of the Ziegfield Follies.
Other prominent Henry Countians include
Vernon Jarrett,
newspaper columnist and social commentator;
Virginia Weldon Kelly,
syndicated columnist; Ethel
McFadden, crowned the first Miss Tennessee;
and Christine Reynolds,
the state's first female cabinet member.
Local artist "Miss Pearl"
Routon was one of those responsible for the
Iris chosen as Tennessee's official cultivated
flower. Dr. Henrietta Veltman
delivered over 4,000 babies during her 50 year of
practice.
Vernon McGarity
received the Congressional Medal of Honor for his
actions in the Battle of the Bulge during World War
II.
|