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Bartram, Mark S.

     Mark S. Bartram was born in Pittsburg, Pennsylvania on November 10, 1829. His father had immigrated to Lawrence County in 1846. Mark lived in Bartramville until 1858. Then, he and his father moved to Ironton. His father became the county recorder.
     Mark was in the steamboat business. He worked with Henry A. Jones.
     In 1859, Mark Bartram was elected the Clerk of Lawrence County. He held this job for six years.

Bothwell, John H.

     John H. Bothwell was born in Pittsburg, Pennsylvania. It was in Pittsburg where he learned the trade of nail making.
     In 1837, he worked in a nail mill in Pittsburg, Pennsylvania. There he met a man named Frederick Norton. The two men would form a close bond and stay friends until a few years before Bothwell died.
     In 1864, John came to Ironton. His first job here was at the Belfonte Mill.

Briggs, Dr. Caleb

     Born on May 24, 1810 in New Rochester, Massachusetts, Dr. Caleb Briggs was the son of Caleb (b. December 28, 1769) and Deliverance “Delia” Burge Burgess (b. March 25, 1772) Briggs. Although little is known of Briggs’s early life, we do know he was educated as a physician, but he often worked as a geologist.

519 South Sixth Street, Ironton

Painting of Hattie Kingsbury Burr House     The house known as the Hattie Kingsbury Burr home was located at the corner of Sixth and Jefferson Street (519 South Sixth Street). The house was built in 1881 by W. S. Kirker. Mr. Kirker was a teller at Second National Bank and a member of the drug firm Kirker, Norton and Otten on the corner of Third and Center Street.

111 South Eighth Street, Ironton

Oak Ridge House     Oak Ridge, the spacious home of Dr. A. Justine Payne located on Eighth Street near Park Avenue (111 South Eighth Street) was once called the ‘GOP Mansion of Ironton.” The home was originally erected by W. C. Amos, one of the seven iron masters who organized Big Etna Furnace. Big Etna was the largest blast furnace in the world in 1873. All of the Big Etna’s iron masters built large homes. Amos was not an exception.

Campbell, Hiram and Sarah

Tombstone of Hiram and Sarah Campbell in Woodland Cemetery
Tombstone of Hiram and Sarah Campbell in Woodland Cemetery

    Hiram Campbell was born on November 18, 1810 in Fleming County, Kentucky to a farming family. His father sold the family farm when Hiram was still quite young and moved the whole family to Maysville, Ohio.

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