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A History of Kentucky and Kentuckians (Extract)
By E. Polk Johnson, Lewis Publishing Company (1912)
Everett
E Winn:- Thorough learning in his profession and well directed effort have
gained to Mr Winn definite precedence as one of the representative members of
the bar of his native country, and he is established in successful practice
at Warsaw, besides which he is at present time the efficient incumbant of the
office of commonwealth attorney for the fifteenth judicial district.
Everett
Ellsworth Winn was born on a farm near Warsaw, Gallatin County, on the 16th
March 1869 and is the son of Thomas J.& Harriet (Gilbert) Winn., the former
of whom was likewise a native of Gallatin County and the latter of whom was
born in Harrison County. The genealogy in the agnatic line is traced back to
staunch Welsh origin, and on the maternal side the lineage is of Scots-Irish
extraction.
William
Winn, great grandfather of him who initiates this sketch, was a native of
Culpepper County, Virginia, in which historic commonwealth the family was founded
in Colonial days, and prior to the opening of the nineteenth century he came
to Kentucky and located a tract of land in the present county of Gallatin, about
5 miles distant from Warsaw, the county seat. here he developed a farm and on
the old homestead he continued to reside until his death. There was born his
son William,
next in line of descent to the present commonwealth attorney of Gallatin County.
William Winn (II) was here reared to maturity under the scenes and conditions
of the pioneer epoch and his entire active career was one of close and duly
successful identification with agricultural pursuits. He lived to a goodly old
age and his wife, whose name was Margaret
Flick (FLACK), attained to the venerable age of ninety-two years. They became
the parents of six sons and two daughters, and of the number Thomas J is the
eldest.
Thomas
J Winn has long been numbered among the representative agriculturists of
his native country and for many years he has been extensively engaged in the
growing of tobacco, a line of enterprise which was also followed by his father
and grandfather. His cherished and devoted wife, who was summoned to the life
eternal in 1904, was a daughter of William
Gilbert, who was born in Ireland, whence he emigrated to America when a
young man. He established his home in Harrison County, Kentucky, and was numbered
among the sterling pioneers of that section of the state. Thomas J & Harriet
(Gilbert) Winn became the parents of two sons and four daughters, and one
of the number died in infancy. The other 5 are still living and the youngest
of the number is he to whom this article is dedicated.
Everett
E Winn (long section about education, studies and admittance to the bar
- cut out - sorry).
Mr Winn has ever given an intelligent and staunch alliance to the cause of
the Democratic Party and in 1894, after completion of his college work, he was
made party nominee for the office of sheriff of Gallatin County. He was elected
by a gratifying majority and was the first to hold this office in Gallatin County
under the new state constitution. Upon the expiration of his term he was succeeded
by his brother William
N Winn.
In 1901 he appeared as a candidate for the office of County Judge, but was
defeated in the primary election by only thirty-five votes. In 1903 he was elected
to represent his native county in the lower house of the state legislature,
in which he served one term and in which connection he made a splendid record
as an active and effective worker in the deliberations of the floor and the
committee rooms. He was accorder the unusual recognition of being made a member
of the committee on rules, chairman of the railway committee and a member of
three other important committies.
In the spring of 1909 Mr Winn was made the candidate of his party for the office
of commonwealth attorney for the fifteenth judicial district, comprising the
counties of Caroll, Grant, Owen, Gallatin and Boone, and he was vitorious at
the polls. He assumed the duties of this important office on the 1st Jan 1910
for a term of six years, and he has the distinction of being the first man elected
to this position from Gallatin County. In the primary electionhe received all
but eighty-four votes, and as a public prosecutor he has made a record for able
and efficient service, through which he has added materially to his professional
laurels.
Mr Winn is affiliated with the Warsaw lodge and chapter of the Masonic fraternity
and has passed the various official chairs in each. He has maintained an impregnable
hold upon popular confidence and esteem and his careful observance of professional
ethics has gained to him the high reagrd of his confrers at the bar.
In the year 1898 Mr Winn was united in marriage to Miss
Mary Alice Montgomery, who was born in Franklin County, this state, and
who is a daughter of Captain
James Montgomery, a gallant soldier of the Confederacy in the Civil war.
Mrs Winn is a prominet factor in the best social life of her home city and is
a zealous worker in the Christian church, of which both she and her husband
are members, Mr and Mrs Winn have two children:- Montgomery
Ellsworth, who was born on the 1th July 1899, and Robinson
McConnell, who was born on the 25th July 1906.
Document extract ends here - 24 Feb 2009