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Copyright © 2008 - 2012 by Andrew J. Morris





A generation which ignores history has no past -- and no future.

Robert Heinlein

History of Nicholas County Kentucky

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Biographies:

Biography of Thomas Harris Barlow

Thomas Harris Barlow, inventor, was born in Nicholas county, Ky., Aug. 5, 1789. He was of limited education. He built a steamboat at Augusta, Tenn., about 1820, and in 1827 constructed a miniature steam locomotive, with car attached, to carry two passengers and with power to ascend a grade of eighty feet to the mile. He operated it in a room on an oval track, the first Western railway train in America. In 1835 he constructed a large locomotive with two upright cylinders and lever beams, both engines attached to one axle with crooks at right angles, and upright boilers. This he expected to run from Lexington to Frankfort, but owing to the peculiar construction of the rails, it was abandoned. In 1845, while teaching his grand-children the motion of the heavenly bodies, he conceived the idea of a small planetarium. After three years of patient labor the instrument was finished, and sold to Girard college, Philadelphia. Others were soon constructed, and one was exhibited at the World's Fair in New York, in 1851, and sold for two thousand dollars. West Point military academy bought one of larger size, as did Annapolis naval academy, and one was sent to New Orleans. It is one of the most exact and remarkable machines ever invented, showing the motions of the solar system, the dates of the eclipses, and of the transit of Mercury and Venus. In 1855 he obtained a patent for a rifled cannon, which, being tested at the Washington navy yard, developed remarkable accuracy and range. Previous to this he invented an automatic nail and tack machine. He died in Cincinnati, O., Feb. 22, 1865.

From: Twentieth Century Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans, Johnson, Rossiter, editor




Leonidas Moreau Lawson Biographical Sketch

Leonidas Moreau Lawson, physician and educator, was born in Nicholas county, Ky., Sept. 10, 1812; son of the Rev. Jeremiah Lawson and a grandson of Gen. Robert Lawson, an officer of the Virginia troops in the Revolutionary war. His father was a Methodist clergyman who went from Virginia to Kentucky and settled in Mason county, and in 1803 removed to Missouri Territory. He was graduated iron Transylvania college in 1837; was professor of anatomy and physiology there, 1843-46, and a student and observer of medical science in England, France and Germany, 1846-47. He was professor of materia medica and pathology in Ohio Medical college, Cincinnati, 1847-52; of the practice of medicine 1852-54; professor of the theory and practice of medicine at Kentucky Medical school, Louisville, 1854-57; at the Ohio Medical college, 1857-60; professor of clinical medicine in the University of Louisiana, New Orleans, 1860-61, and again professor of the theory and practice of medicine at the Ohio Medical college, 1861-64. He established the Western Lancet in 1847, and edited and contributed to its columns, 1847-64. He published an edition of Dr. James Hope's "Morbid Anatomy" (1844), and is the author of: Practical Treatise on Phthisis Pulmonalis (1861). He died in Cincinnati, Ohio, Jan. 24, 1864.

From: Twentieth Century Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans, Johnson, Rossiter, editor




Local History and Genealogy Links:

Kentucky Facts:
Tree: Kentucky tulip poplar
Bird: cardinal
Flower: goldenrod
Nickname: Bluegrass State
Motto: United We Stand, Divided We Fall
Area (sq. mi.): 40,395
Capitol: Frankfort
Admitted: 1 Jun 1792




Nicholas County Facts:

Seat: Carlisle
Established: 1799
Formed from: Bourbon and Mason


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