

The noble profession of medicine affords to the student in that science a never ending
source of investigation and experiment. It is perhaps one of the most trying on brain and
body of any in the field of science, for it absorbs the attention of him who practices it
conscientiously, both day and night, and brings into play the most versatile powers of his
being. Among the prominent physicians and surgeons of Western Grove, Arkansas, stands the name
of Dr. George W. Floyd, whose kindly nature instinctively turned to that broad field of
human suffering for his life work. Dr. Floyd was born in Ray County, Tennessee, in 1850, and he
is a son of James J. and Louisa Jane Richards Floyd, the former a native of Virginia, and
the latter of North Carolina. The parents were married in Tennessee, and where the father
spent the remainder of his life, dying in 1884. He was a farmer all his days, and served
in the Federal Army during the Civil War as commissary sergeant. Mrs. Floyd is still living.
Grandfather Floyd came from Virginia to Tennessee in an early day, and died in the
latter State. Curtis Richards, the maternal grandfather, died in Meigs County, Tennessee. Of the
nine children born to his parents, our subject was second in order of birth. The others were
named as follows: Sarah, died about 1860, when quite young; Curtis D., a farmer of Boone
County, Arkansas; Joseph Charles; James L.; John H.; Michigan; Louisa Jane, wife of S. M. Heard,
and Hester, the last, six all residing in Tennessee. Like most country boys our subject's
time in youth was divided between assisting on the farm and in attending to the common
schools where he received a fair English education. Early in life Dr. Floyd began to lay the
foundation for a medical career, a profession whose noiseless, yet ofttimes marvelous
triumphs are unknown to the multitude. In 1872 and '73 he attended the Medical Department of
Vanderbilt University at Nashville, Tennessee, and in the latter year began practicing in Bell
Town, Tennessee, where he remained nine years. Soon after he came to Arkansas and located at
Western Grove; where he has an excellent practice in Marion, Searcy, Boone and Newton
Counties. The Doctor is a member of the Masonic fraternity, Bluff Springs Lodge No. 103, at
Western Grove, and is a member and treasurer of Belleport Chapter No. 61, R. A. M., and of
St. Aldemar Commandery, K. T., No. 10, at Harrison. He is also a member of Western Grove
Eastern Star Chapter NO. 25.
Lisa Hamilton submitted the above data from Goodspeed's, 1884;
she did so to help others, is not researching the above person or
families mentioned therein.

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