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Histories and Biographies of
Ballard,
Calloway,
Fulton,
Graves,
Hickman,
McCracken and Marshall Counties,
Kentucky A Reprint of Part H of
Battle. J.H., W.H. Perrin And G.C. Kniffin. Kentucky: A History of the State. First Edition. Louisville, Chicago: F.A. Battey Publishing Co., 1885.
Ballard Co.
H. G.BLACK,
Ballard County, was born in December, 1812, in Cannonsburg,
Penn., where he grew to manhood. His father was a native of Ireland, and during the Revolutionary war, in attempting to come to
America, he was captured and imprisoned on board a British man-of-war, where he was retained for five years. He finally escaped on the island of Cuba, where the vessel touched for supplies, and remained concealed until the ship sailed. He then made his way to
America, landed in
Virginia, where he afterward married and went to Cannonsburg,
Penn., and some years later removed to
Ohio. H.G. Black (subject) received a good common school education in
Pennsylvania, went to
Ohio with his father’s family and in the fall of 1840 came to
Kentucky, locating in
Ballard County. Here he engaged in teaching and surveying. In 1843, he surveyed the land on which the town of Blandville stands; he held the office of county surveyor for upward of twenty years, and until he would have it no longer. He owns a farm of eighty acres two and a half miles northeast of
Bardwell in Blandville Precinct. He was married, in 1843, to Elizabeth
Jones of
Kentucky, who died about the year 1867. They had twelve children, five of whom are now living-four sons and one daughter.