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This Page Updated Sunday, 03-Apr-2011 17:39:48 PDT
| *** GLEN DEAN *** |
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In a peaceful little valley about ten miles southwest of
Hardinsburg lies one of the most picturesque and noteworthy
communities to be found anywhere in our Commonwealth. Daniels
Creek meanders right through the center of the little town, its
water always being crystal clear, except immediately after a
heavy rain. Since 1800, this little creek has furnished
amusement for little boys, wonderment and a scientific laboratory
for probing adolescent minds, a mirror of enchantment for lovers,
and an everlasting abundance of clear water for the farmers
livestock. All of the hills rising from the creek bottoms
are thickly wooded with white oak, black oak, sugar tree, and
many of the other valuable timbers. This little creek
valley runs for a distance of about six miles to where it empties
into Rough River some two miles below the new Rough River Dam.
This total valley, together with the upland farms on either side,
constitute the community of Glen Dean.
The residents of Glen Dean, from the very earliest of its
existence have put a great emphasis upon education and always
keeping it well balanced with their religious life. The old
Goshen Baptist Church of Glen Dean was one of the first places of
Christian worship in Breckinridge County. It was located on
Long Lick Creek, on the old Uncle Ike Owen place, on what is now
Leroy Jarboes farm. Realizing the necessity of
Christian training, a group of settlers in the community met in
1808, and built the first church.
Goshen was truly a suitable name. It came from the Biblical
community in Egypt. It was located in the Easter section of
the Nile Delta where the Isralites were planted. The word
means, A land of peace and plenty.
The first of these settlers to invade this section of the
wilderness in our county were the Deans, Moormans, Owens, and
Robertsons. These were well-to-do families in the areas
from which they came, bringing with them many slaves.
James Moorman, the first to come to our county in 1800, was born
in Campbell County, Virginia in 1776, the year of the signing of
the Declaration of Independence. He was sheriff in Kentucky
for many years.
Summers Dean was the first member of that family to come to the
Glen Dean community. He was a native of Mercer County,
Kentucky, born in 1800 on April Fools Day.
Thomas Owen, of Welsh descent, was born in North Carolina and
migrated to Breckinridge County about the turn of the century.
William Robertson was born in Virginia. He came to
Breckinridge County in the early eighteen hundreds, when he was
eleven years old. He married Miss Sally Moorman of Glen
Dean. Thus began the Robertson clan.
Whether it be the inherited traits of their forebearers or
someone special elements found in the soil, I do not know, but
for some reason this community has produced more than its share
of good brains and great characters. Doctors, lawyers,
politicians, statesmen, and soldiers are among the products of
this community.
Glen Dean was named in honor of probably the largest land owner
in the county at that timea Mr. William Johnson Dean.
William Johnson Dean was the brother of Henry Dean who married
Miss Sarah McDonald. She, it was, who was dropping corn
behind Colonel William Hardin at Hardins Fort when he was shot by
the Indians, and threw him on his horse, and saved his scalp by
getting him to the safety of the Fort.
Prior to 1891, which year the railroad was completed through the
valley, Glen Dean was just another name, but at this time it grew
rapidly as a boom town, and became the shipping center of the
area.
Before the days of the Iron Horse these farmers, most
of whom were wealthy, were compelled to travel either to
Cloverport or Hardinsburg to dispose of their farm commodities
and to buy the necessities of life. They never seemed to
realize the inconvenience attached to this sort of routine.
But with the shrill of the locomotive and the puff of the steam
through the glen of Daniels Creek, new ideas were generated in
the bosoms of those who set about to build a town of prominence
at Glen Dean.
The Hon. D. C. Moorman was the first chief officer of the town,
being magistrate, while Wm. Owen was the first constable.
There were many railroad employees and lumbermen working for the
Dean Tie Company, who used Glen Dean as a trade center. As
a result storehouses and residences began to spring up like
magic.
Joe Mattingly has the distinction of building the first business
place in Glen Dean. He built and was proprietor of the
celebrated hotel known as the Glendean House.
W. C. Moorman and C. Beeler were the first Glen Dean merchants to
display their wares to the public. Their primitive
storehouse was a box car, so divided as to serve for a public
store, post office, and a city hall.
By 1901, ten years after the coming of the railroad, Glen Dean
had outgrown her class and it was necessary that she be
incorporated into a city of the sixth class with a board of town
trustees, a police judge, and a marshall. The town board
consisted of W. C. Moorman, Joe Mattingly, I. H. Deweese, T. W.
Mattingly and J. M. Howard. Perry Hoskins was the police
judge, while the conduct of the city was under the jurisdiction
of Marshall Dan Goodman.
The town plan was laid out with three streets running the length
of it: Main Street, Johnson Avenue, and Marys Avenue,
the last two took their names from Mr. and Mrs. Johnson Dean, who
gave the land for the town. On Main Street was located the
New Bank of Glen Dean. There were two mercantile houses
owned by Mr. C. Beeler, and Mrs. I. H. Deweese and W. C. Moorman,
Mr. Joe Mattinglys Hotel and the drugstore of Dr. Dempster.
There were also in the eastern end of Main, several residences.
At the extreme lower end of Main Street was located the large
tobacco factory built by John Dean, son of Johnson Dean. After
his death Robert Moorman and Jess Howard operated it for the
American Tobacco Company. Later it was rented to William
Hensley of Hardinsburg.
The Utopia School and several residences were on Johnson Avenue.
Utopia School was built in 1893. It consisted of three
large rooms, two on the first floor, both used as classrooms.
The large room on the second floor was used as a town hall.
Professor Frank Lyons was the first principal. Later Mr.
Joel Pile, who in 1902, became the superintendent of county
schools, was principal with Miss Irene Board and Mary Moorman as
teachers. For several years there was a total enrollment of
224 with an average attendance of 100.
The jail, or calaboose, as it was called, was located directly in
front of Ernest Robertsons store.
Dave Moorman, son of Jess Moorman and grandson of James Moorman,
the original settler, server our county in legislature in 1901,
and is accredited with successfully defeating a bill to divide
Breckinridge County, making Hansen County of the eastern half.
Mr. Moorman was also president of the Bank of Glen Dean which
lasted only nine years.
Jess Moorman, Daves father sometimes known as Devil Jess,
rode a horse from Glen Dean to Virginia where he purchased a
Negro slave woman and her five sons for the sum of $2, 700.00.
The woman was old and he paid $200 for her and $500 each of the
five boys. He rode his horse through Cumberland Gap and
walked the slaves home.
Ernest and Vick Robertson were engage in cattle and tobacco
business in Glen Dean for years. The re-dried annually,
about 350,000 lbs. of Burley for the Louisville Markets. They
also bought and sold some $150,000 worth of cattle and work
stock.
Ernest Robertson ran a general store in Glen Dean for forty years
until he retired. For several years his store made in the
neighborhood of $40,000 per year.
In the early years of this community probably the most important
man in town, other than the preacher and the doctor, was the
village blacksmith.
When a piece of machinery was broken it was the blacksmith who
repaired it, or if beyond the point of repairing he made a new
one.
J. A. Mattingly was one of the better blacksmiths in the state.
Mr. Mattingly ran more than a blacksmith shop, he operated a
manufacturing plant. In addition to sharpening plow points
and colters, and the many other mending jobs from wheelbarrows to
threshing machines, he annually turned out some sixty to seventy
plows and from ten to fifteen wagons. Some of Mr.
Mattinglys wagons and plows lasted longer than the
blacksmithing profession itself. Today a blacksmith shop
may be found only in history.
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow in his poem, The Village
Blacksmith, tried to show the importance of this man to the
total well-being of the community. Ironically enough, the
old High Wheel wagon, the Blacksmith Shop, and the Chestnut tree,
faded from the picture at the same time.
Dr. R. T. Dempster and his son, P. E. Dempster migrated from
Canada to the Glen Dean Community where he and his son practiced
for years, alleviating human suffering. They had their own
drug store where they always kept on hand, a supply of any needed
drug.
The Dean Tie Company came into being in 1891, when the railroad
made its maiden trip down Daniels Glen. J. M. Howard was
manager of the firm and shipped an average of about 1, 400 car
loads of ties and lumber annually. Many of the ties were
sawed at or near Glen Dean but many more were hauled for a
distance of 10 to 15 miles on wagons. A majority of these
ties were hewn with a broadax. The standard cross-tie was 7
in. x 9 in. x 8 ft.
The Dean Tie Company brought a lot of money into the south end of
our county for many years. Unfortunately very little care
was taken in cutting the trees, and one of our greatest natural
resources was wantonly wasted.
This little community reached beyond the boundary of our county
or state. Mr. Moorman Robertson, son of Charles Robertson,
was converted in the old Goshen Baptist Church. He, as a
young man, was a Breckinridge County school teacher and his
salary was $15.00 per month. He taught only one school,
then went to China as a missionary.
As was previously mentioned, the people of Glen Dean kept their
business life well balanced with their religion. In the
very earliest days of the community, prior to 1808, the people
met in different homes and held their religious services.
It was not until 1808, that there was a church building in which
to worship. The Pioneer Goshen Church, on the old Ike Owen
farm, on Long Lick Creek, served as the center of religious
activities until it was moved to a new location near the old
Black Lick Bridge, on the Johnson Dean farm which Mrs. Dorsey
Brown now owns.
This church is often referred to as the Old Goshen
Church, as it is still remembered by some of the older
residents of the community. In 1900, it was decided to
remove the church to Glen Dean to its present location. In
1904, the first services were held in the New Glen Dean Goshen
Baptist Church, which stands there today with a sizeable
membership.
A Methodist Church was built in the town, which lasted for many
years. The church was built in 1903, and was in continual
service until 1956, when it was discontinued and its members
moved to Hardinsburg.
The family of William Johnson Dean dates back to the year 1000.
The Dean family came from Denmark to Scotland, to England and
Stephen Dean was one of the pilgrims who came on the Mayflower,
and settled at Plymouth. From there he followed
civilization westward.
William Johnson Dean was the son of Summers Dean and Mrs. Amanda
(Robertson) Dean of Virginia. He owned 1700 acres of good
crop land lying along Daniels Creek, -- so named because a Negro
man, named Daniel, drowning in its waters. He donated the
section of the valley to the town that bears his name, Glen Dean.
It was originally spelled Glendean.
Mr. William Johnson Dean was one of the outstanding farmers and
stockmen of Breckinridge County.
William Johnson Dean had nine (9) children: Gordon Summers,
John Allen, William John, Mary Elizabeth, Amanda Robertson, Jimmy
Lee, Margaret Wickliffe, and Charles Wickliffe.
Judge John Allen Dean was a distinguished lawyer and served for a
number of years as referee in the Bankruptcy court of the Western
district of Kentucky and was located at Owensboro, Kentucky.
Margaret Wickliffe married Charles L. Cornwell.
Charles L. Cornwell was the chief engineer for the railroad when
its tracks were being laid through the village. It was
there he met Miss Margaret, and to this union was born one son,
Dean Cornwell.
Dean Cornwell is one of the outstanding painters and illustrators
of the United States. Some of his outstanding works are his
illustrations of the City of the Great King,
Man of Galilee.
His drawings in the main rotunda of the Los Angeles Public
Library and the decoration of the Dame and Two
Lunettes, in the Lincoln Memorial Building, Redlands,
California, and the murals in the Raliegh room of the Hotel
Warwick in New York City.
In 1937, he did the murals for the new courthouse in Nashville,
Tennessee, and also the murals for the new Government Pot Office
in Morgantown, North Carolina.
The over-all community of Glen Dean will continue to live and
make history, but since the county roads have improved and trucks
have taken over most of the shipping, cars have drained the
passenger service and in 1941, the railroad pulled out of Glen
Dean completely. The town is only a lazy shell of its
former self. The school consolidated with the McQuady
school, there is no doctor, no tobacco warehouse, no hotel and no
drugstore. It lies at the end of our countys paved
road, a victim of history, with Daniels Creek and its clear
bubbling water, the lone, unchanged survivor of a by-gone period.
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