Tennessee
James W. Scott.. In mentioning the prominent farmers of Washington
Couuty, Ark., the list would be incomplete without the name of Mr. Scott, who
is a native of the State in which he now resides, being born in Crawford County
September 2, 1832. It is not known where his parents, Joseph and Mary (Larremore)
Scott, were born, but they were very early residents of Crawford County,
Ark. Cove Creek Valley was then a solid cane-brake, and the country was in a
very wild and unsettled condition. The father was a farmer, and died in 1850 at
the age of sixty-five years. His wife died in 1878. aged about sixty years. After
Mr. Scott's death she was married .to W. C. Maxey, and moved to Franklin
Countv, Ark. Mr. Scott was also twice married, but his first wife's name is not
known. To his last marriage were born one daughter (deceased), and three
sons (living): James W., WilliamN. and Joseph M. James M., beingthe eldest
of the family, was the main support of the family after his father's death. He
managed the farm for his mother until 1854, and then located on his present
farm, which consists of 300 acres.
May 1, 1851, he married Emily, a daughter
of Roland E. Hodge, who was a Tennesseean. Mrs. Scott was born in Tennessee
January 10, 1833, and died in Washington County, Ark., March 16, 1871,
deeply mourned by her family and friends. The following are her children:
William H., Mary A. (wife of Jasper Cole), Charlie C., Martha A. (wife of W.
V. Walker), John and Edwin W. In 1871 Mr. Scott married Mary F. Hardesty,
who was born in Washington County, Ark., March 2, 1844, and is a daughter of
Loving Hardesty. Mr. and Mrs. Scott are church members, and he is a Republican
and a member of the K. of H. In August, 1862, he was .conscripted into
the Confederate army, but about the 12th of October he left the Confederate
army and later came home. In April, 1863, he went to Springfield, Mo., and
joined the Federal service, and was a forage teamster for three years. In June,
1863, the family moved to Missouri, but in the spring of 1864 returned to Arkansas,
and in April went to Fort Smith. In August of the same year Mr.
Scott took his family to Fayetteville, but very shortly after took them to Pope
County, Mo., where they remained until the close of the war. In 1866 he returned
with his family to Arkansas, where he found his house burned to the
ground and his property destroyed, but he immediately set to work, and with
the assistance of his wife and sons soon replaced what had been destroyed, and
is now one of the prosperous farmers of Washington County.