HARDINSBURG
Hardinsburg
is a typical little county seat town. Like many
of the others in our state, it was the first
settlement in the
county and is centrally located. It is
approximately 35 miles across the county either
north to South or East to West. The county
seat towns were usually centrally located in
order that the most remote sections would be able
to travel to and from the courthouse in one day.
Those of us who are old enough remember know that
thirty miles in a wagon, over mud roads, is a
good day's travel.
The first courthouse was made of logs and erected
in 1801. In 1868, the old courthouse was replaced
by a new one.
This one was built of brick which were burned on
Mr. Hook's farm. The brick kiln was located in
the schoolhouse yard between
the school building and Mr. Sherman Beauchamp's
home. Mr. Edgar Bennett of Basin Springs erected
the building. This new
courthouse was a thing of pride to the people of
Breckinridge County. It was of red brick with a
large dome on the top. Many a country
boy, on his first trip to the county seat, looked
with amazement at this gigantic structure. The
building stood the storms of time and answered
well its purpose until it went up in flames
February 7, 1958. The fire broke out in the
extreme upper part of the building so all hands
and the
cook put forth every effort and succeeded in
carrying to safety all of the early and valuable
records of the county. Immediately, the people of
the county set themselves to the task of building
a new courthouse. This structure, modern and
beautiful, stands today as a symbol to the
courage and progressive spirit of our people.
The Hook family is one of the oldest families
that are still connected with the business life
of Hardinsburg. Mr. Russell Hook,
Mathias Hook and Howard Hook, are the sons of Mr.
Jeff Hook, who in early life operated a sawmill
and a flour mill in Hardinsburg. In 1913,
he went into the automobile business. He owned
and operated the Ford garage and owned the first
car in the county. Mr. Jeff Hook
was a familiar figure around Hardinsburg most of
his life. He contributed much to the success of
several business enterprises, holding the respect
and esteem of all who knew him.
Jeff Hook was one of twenty-one children born to
George Hook. Mr. George, in addition to being
very prolific, was a
well-respected citizen of the Hardinsburg
district. His home was two miles southwest of
Hardinsburg, on the little Owensboro road. George
Hook was the son of John and Lucretia (Wood)
Hook, and the grandson of John Hook who was a
soldier in George Washington&rsquos army
during the
Revolutionary War. Mr. John Hook was a native of
Pennsylvania. In 1818, John the II moved to
Breckinridge County. Mr. George
Hook was born here in 1825. The Hook family has
always been mechanically inclined. They loved
engines, saw mills, and flour mills.
Mr. Jubal Hook, who was a brother to George Hook
and father of Clint, Bud and Charley, operated a
grain mill on the corner where the
Gulf oil station now stands. Mr. Hook had an old
colored man who ran the steam engine, his name
was Boaz Poole. Boaz had a desire to ride
the fly wheel on the engine. One day he tied a
string to the throttle of the engine, then seated
himself on the hub of the fly wheel. His head
was braced against the other side of the rim. He
then pulled the string and held onto the spokes.
He pulled the string a little too hard giving the
engine more steam than he had intended and his
act had begun. Fortunately, Mr. Hook came in a
few minutes later and stopped the engine.
Boaz fell off on the ground pretty well shaken
up, but satisfied. Howard, Mathias, and Russell
Hook are all business men of
present day Hardinsburg. Mathias Hook is in the
road building business and operates a lot of
heavy equipment. He also has a Ready Mix
concrete plant in Hardinsburg and sometimes
carried as many as 100 men on his payroll. The
Hook brothers sold their garage several
years ago to a Mr. J. C. Blancett from Calhoun,
Kentucky, who has carried on quite a successful
business. Mr. Russell Hook
might be best classified as a student of history.
He was one of the fortunate ones, and through
good business practices
he was able to retire at age 21. Since then he
has spent a portion of every day studying
history. He says he spends his time learning
history.
When he was in school he had to study it; and he
didn't like it then. He is a member of the
Kentucky Historical Society, the Civil War
Society
of Kentucky, the Filson Club, and the McCoy
Roundtable.
The McCoy Roundtable is so called because it is
held in Hershel McCoy's restaurant, where may be
had the best coffee in the nation.
This organization has no dues, no by-laws, no
fees and no particular purpose but it is the
breeding ground for political movements,
Civic advancement, Historical research and the
uncovering of forgotten Folklore. This Roundtable
is composed of some ten or
twelve members who meet regularly every day and
discuss such subjects as might come into the
minds of the first members present.
These gentlemen are all very scholarly; and with
very few exceptions their discussions are quite
enlightening. Occasionally these
discussions become accelerated to the point of
being categorized as arguments.
This McCoy Roundtable consists of Russell Hook,
Jim Ames, Hughes Goodman, Paul Fuqua, Ed Robbins,
Sam Fuqua, Wade Glasscock
and others. This group meets every day with a
very high percentage of attendance. The
discussions at this McCoy Roundtable have
much in common with the type of arguments that
took place in the ancient Athenian court yards
some two to four hundred years
before Christ. This type gathering, where each
person present divulges his personal philosophic
view of current problems, is a thing common to
most all rural
county seat towns; but seemingly has escaped the
credit for which it is due. Mr. Samuel Johnson,
the Medieval English author, once said that the
great
majority of the progress of civilization has its
origin in a tavern.
Mr. Russell Hook who is generally the leading
spokesman for the Roundtable is financially able
to travel extensively but he finds Hardinsburg to
be the most fascinating place on the globe. On
one occasion he went to Florida to spend a month
vacation; but after a few days there he could
stand it
no longer so he hurried home to get his books and
learn about the places he had been and seen. Mr.
Russell and his books are as interwoven as
Socrates
and his circles.
In 1840, a route was established from Hardinsburg
to Leitchfield. The first Rural Route established
out of the Hardinsburg office was
in 1908. It ran a distance of 24.75 miles and
served thirty-seven families. Since that time,
with the improvement of roads and
transportation, mail is delivered to practically
every door in the county every day. Soon after
1908, these rural routes were established
and mail was delivered all over the county. These
early rural carriers deserve a place of praise in
American history. Their faithfulness
and the sense of duty and responsibility under
the worst sort of environmental circumstances put
them in the category with the country
doctors of that same seemingly impossible age.
Mr. Jim Noblett, the father of Colman Noblett,
who lives at Harned, was one of these rural
carriers. In the winter of 1917 and 1918, when
the big snow fell and stayed on the ground all
winter, Mr. Noblett was carrying the mail from
Harned to Roff. He usually rode a horse, but the
snow was so
deep and covered with a deep layer of ice that he
was forced to abandon his horse and travel on
foot. One morning he wobbled into Mr. Frankie
Mattingly's
store and post office at Roff carrying his
bulging mail pouch and the temperature was ten
below zero. He delivered his burden to the
postmaster, then went
behind the old pot-bellied stove and thawed out.
Finally he made ready for his return trek to
Harned, but as he went to the door he said,
"Gentlemen, you may
hear of wars and rumors of wars but you will
never hear of Jim Noblett bidding on another mail
route."
The old city hall was owned by Mr. Green Beard
and stood across the street from Dr. Sills'
Medical Center. From the Civil War until World
War I this old city hall was a place for business
and political meetings as well as a place of
amusement. There were many medicine shows
held there. These medicine shows often stayed as
long as a week at a time. They had their
comedians and other type entertainers
that could draw a crowd, then acted as salesmen
between acts. One such show was, Dr. Emmerson's
Health Giver. It was probably
stump-water but it cured many an ailment.
In 1910, Mr. Bud sills put a picture show in the
old city hall. It was powered by a gasoline
engine that pulled a generator. This was Dr.
Sills' grandfather. These were silent pictures
but Mr. Sills supplied his own music. His
brother, Jonas sills, played a piano and beat a
drum, or furnished
about any other type music necessary for the
occasion. Most of these old silent pictures were
serials, and you just had to go back week after
week
to see how the show turned out.
About 1920, The Knights of Columbus put up the
building where the Leanheart's Variety and
Storms' appliance store is. The McGary brothers
rented the building and put in a real picture
show that talked. This furnished amusement and
recreation for a number of years until
drive-in theaters and television put them on the
blink
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