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Washington County ArArchives Biographies.....Berry, Millard 
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Robert Sanchez http://www.genrecords.net/emailregistry/vols/00027.html#0006574 July 21, 2009, 1:55 pm

Author: S. J. Clarke (Publisher, 1922)

MILLARD BERRY.
    Millard Berry, who is engaged in the abstract business in Springdale, was
born in Washington, Indiana. October 19, 1856, and is a son of Walter E. and
Angelinc (Cross) Berry. The father was born in Mason county, Kentucky, while the
mother's birth occurred in Daviess county, Indiana, and they were married in the
latter state. They removed to Texas on leaving the north and there lived for
four years, on the expiration of which period they came to Arkansas, settling in
Springdale in 1883. The father, who had followed farming for many years, lived
retired after coming to this state. Mr. and Mrs. Walter E. Berry had one child,
Millard, and all lived together until the father's death, which occurred about
1902. The mother survived for several years, dying in 1908 in the faith of the
Christian church, to which she belonged, while Mr. Berry was a member of the
Baptist church. In politics he was a democrat. The family record can be traced
back to an early period in Kentucky. There resided Evans Berry, the grandfather
of Millard Berry, who became one of the pioneers of Indiana, contributing to the
agricultural development and progress of that state, in which he resided until
his demise. The maternal grandfather, William Cross, was born in Virginia and
he, too, became one of the early residents of Indiana.

    Millard Berry of this review was educated in Washington, Indiana, and on
starting out in life on his own account he entered a law office at that place.
He was afterward admitted to practice at the bar of the state and followed his
profession there fur some time.

    While still living in Indiana, Mr. Berry was married in 1878 to Miss Ida
McHolland. who was born in Baltimore, Maryland, a daughter of Thaddeus
McHolland, who was a carpenter by trade. Mr. and Mrs. Berry became parents of
six children: Thaddeus, who is engaged in the abstract business in Fayetteville,
Arkansas; Walter, who resides upon a farm near Springdale; Marian, the wife of
B. C. Heiner, who is a physician practicing at Stilwell, Oklahoma; Helen, the
wife of C. A. McQuaid, a dentist of Hominy, Oklahoma; Hazel D., who married
Howard D. Ewalt, who is engaged in the real estate business at Springdale; and
Josephine, the wife of Percy Brown, a registered druggist now connected with the
Ownbey Drug Company of Springdale and Fayetteville, Arkansas.

    Following their marriage Mr. and Mrs. Berry resided in Indiana until 1879
and then removed to Texas, where they remained for four years. On the expiration
of that period, in 1883, they came to Arkansas, settling in Springdale, where
Mr. Berry opened an abstract office. He also traveled through Arkansas and Texas
during the first two years after coming to this state, after which he engaged in
the abstract business, which has since claimed his attention. He is the oldest
abstractor continuously engaged in this line in the county. He now devotes his
entire attention to this undertaking and the management of his farming
interests. He owns valuable farm property in Benton and Washington counties and
is now planting his land to vineyards. He started with nothing when he came here
from Dallas county, Texas, with a two-horse wagon. There were only two buggies
in the town of Springdale at the time and the place had a population of but five
hundred. Great, indeed, have been the changes which have occurred through the
intervening period, as the district has become thickly settled and highly
developed, while the old horse and wagon and other primitive vehicles have been
replaced by the automobile.

    Both Mr. and Mrs. Berry are most widely and favorably known. Mrs. Berry
belongs to the Christian church and Mr. Berry has membership with the Masons and
the Odd Fellows. He is a past master of the former and a past Noble Grand of the
latter. In politics he has always been a democrat and he has served as mayor of
Springdale for two or three terms. He has also been a member of the city council
and of the school board and for two terms he was county judge of Washington
county. He has made a most excellent record in office by the prompt and faithful
manner in which he has discharged his duties. He has ever stood for development
and improvement In public affairs, and his life has been a potent force in the
accomplishment of good for the community in which he lives.


Additional Comments:
Citation:
Centennial History of Arkansas
Volume II
Chicago-Little Rock: The S. J. Clarke Publishing Company
1922


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