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Biography of Carey N Vise, Scott Co, AR

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Submitted by: Charlene Holland <Char@presys.com>
        Date: 9 Sep 1998
Copyright.  All rights reserved.
http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm
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      Carey N. Vise, farmer and ex-sheriff. One of the neatest and best
kept farms in Hickman Township is that owned and operated by Mr. Vise,
containing 600 acres, about 200 of which are under cultivation, well
improved, the rest being timberland. On this land is an excellent young
orchard, and in connection with his farming operations Mr. Vise is also
engaged in stock raising. He was born in Georgia, the eldest of six
children born to John S. and Esther (Vise) Vise, both of whom were born
in the Palmetto State, the mother's death occurring there in 1859. Mr.
Vise afterward married again, taking for his second consort Miss Eliza M.
Mason, by whom he became the father of one child. He served in the
Confederate Army during the Rebellion, being in Capt. Robert Boyce's
company of artillery, and taking part in the battles of Manassas,
Antietam, Rappahannock Station and Jackson, Miss. After the war he
followed farming in Georgia until 1874, when he to Arkansas, his son,
Carey N., having previously come here, and settled on a farm two miles
from Waldron, on which place he died in 1883. Carey M. Vise was born in
1846, and was educated in the schools of South Carolina. He entered the
Confederate Army at the age of sixteen years, being in a company of light
artillery, commanded by Capt. Boyce and T. S. Jeter, and was in the same
engagements in which his father participated. He was captured at
Asheville, N.C., but the war closed a few days later and he was released.
In the winter of 1867 he came to Arkansas, soon after purchasing 120
acres of land, fifteen miles west of Waldron, on Jones Creek. He was
married in December of the same year to Miss Sarah A. Young, of South
Carolina, and on the tract which he first purchased he lived for a long
time, although he purchased other land and made numerous valuable
improvements. Since 882, however, he has made the town of Waldron his
home, where he has a pleasant and comfortable residence. He has always
been interested in politics, and for the last eighteen years has held
office. He was assessor six years, justice of the peace, four years, and
in 1882 he was elected sheriff of the county, a position he held by
reelection until 1890. His children are as follows: Willie, Beatrice,
John, Melissa, Charlie, Sadie and Benjamin.