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MONONGALIA COUNTY WEST VIRGINIA ****************************************************************** Submitted to the West Virginia Biographies Project by: Valerie & Tommy Crook vfcrook@trellis.net November 8, 1999 ******************************************************************
The History of West Virginia, Old and New Published 1923, The American Historical Society, Inc., Chicago and New York, Volume III, pg. 294 Monongalia
JAMES E. HENRY. Six miles southwest of Morgantown on the Fairmont Road is the village center of Laurel Point, formerly a postoffice but now served by rural route No. 1 out of Morgantown. It has been a trading point for a great many years, and the principal general store is con- ducted by James E. Henry, and he is the logical successor of a business of this kind that has been conducted for at least three quarters of a century.
Mr. Henry represents one of the sterling pioneer families of Grant District in Monongalia County. His ancestor was Franklin Henry, a typical pioneer, who acquired some 400 acres in Grant District. He moved to West Virginia in Indian times and frequently had to place his family in the local forts to protect them. His son Eli spent his life in the same district and died at the age of sixty. The third generation here was represented by Sylvanus, who succeeded to the ownership of the old homestead and lived there until his death at the age of seventy-two. The three sons of Sylvanus were: Jesse H. who was county super- intendent of schools eight years; Omar C.; and Elroy, who is now principal of the Riverside school.
The father of the Laurel Point merchant was Edgar Henry, a son of Eli Henry mentioned above. Edgar Henry was a shoemaker and farmer and always lived on his farm in Grant District, He died at the age of forty-nine. His wife was Rachel Brand, daughter of Elliott and Susannah Brand, and she is still living at the age of seventy-seven. Edgar and Rachel Henry reared seven children: Emery Marcine, who was an able physician practicing in the home district where he died in 1909 at the age of forty-one after an operation in a hospital at Baltimore, and his son Otto is a professor in the Polytechnic College in Brook- lyn, New York; Grace is the wife of Joseph E. Conway, one of the oldest teachers in Monongalia County living at Westover; Charles is a fruit grower in the Grand Dis- trict; the next in age is James E.; Nettie is the wife of Amos Scott of Grant District; Otis is a farmer near the old homestead; and Boss is a commercial salesman.
James E. Henry was born January 1, 1878, and was reared and educated in Grant District. At the age of twenty he began traveling for a Fairmont wholesale grocery house, and continued that business four years. In 1905 he bought the old store at Laurel Point and has enjoyed a prosperous and growing trade extending his patronage over a large part of the surrounding territory.
Mr. Henry is one of the very popular citizens of Mon- ongalia County, is justly esteemed for his integrity and executive ability, and is a stanch republican in politics. He was twice a candidate at the primaries for county assessor. Mr. Henry married Nora Lezier. They have six sons, Robert, Stanley, Lee, Frederick, Max and Hugo. The first two are attending the Morgantown High School.
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