

Among the honored and well-to-do tillers of the soil of Newton County, Arkansas, may be
mentioned Daniel Phillips, whose many years of hard labor have been rewarded with abundant
means. He is now in the enjoyment of a comfortable income, the result of intelligent
management and undeviating industry, and enjoys the esteem and confidence of all with whom
he has had business relations. He was born in Morgan County, Tennessee, August 27, 1846, being
the sixth of nine children born to Jesse and Parrnelia Everage Phillips, both of whom were
born in the Old North State. The former died in Johnson County, Arkansas, in 1878, at the age
of seventy five years, in which section he had settled in 1859, and where he was
successfully engaged in tilling the soil. During the lamentable Civil War he was a stanch
Union man and all his sons were soldiers in the Federal Army. He became a strong supporter
of the Republican party after the war, but being of a quiet and retiring disposition he
never aspired to public preferment, choosing to leave the strife and turmoil of political
life to others. He was a worthy member of the Methodist Episcopal Church, as was his wife,
who died in 1880 at the age of seventy eight years. His father, John Phillips, was a North
Carolinian. The children which he and his wife reared were as follows: Dinah, Miles H.,
Frances, Absalom, Margaret, Daniel, John, William, Tull, and one that is deceased. Daniel
and Absalom are residents of Newton County, Arkansas, and the latter is a successful merchant of
Marble City. Frances, who is the wife of M. Braziler, is residing in this county as is also
Margaret, who is the wife of John Allen. The parents of these children died in Johnson
County, Arkansas, where they made their home some years prior to their death. Daniel Phillips
was a boy of thirteen years when he came to this county, and owing to his youth he did not
enlist in the service of his country until April 18, 1863, when he became a member of
Company I, Second Arkansas Cavalry, under John E. Phelps, and was in some of the principal
battles in which that regiment participated. Notwithstanding his youth, he made a good
soldier and was ever found at the post of duty. He received his discharge at La Grange,
Tennessee, in 1865, after which he returned to his home in Newton County, where he at once
energetically entered upon the pursuits of civil life. While serving in the Civil War he was
married to Miss Clarissa Brasell, a daughter of James Brasell, who died many years ago in
Illinois. His widow, whose maiden name was Priscilla Suazey, came from her native State of
Tennessee to Illinois, thence to Missouri, and in 1861 became a resident of Newton County,
Arkansas, her home being located about twenty five miles from Jasper, where she died soon after
the war. Mrs. Phillips was born in Jackson County, Tennessee, April 8, 1847, and after the war
closed she located with her husband on a farm about twenty miles from Jasper, where they
made their home until 1869, when they located on a farm near Mount Parthenon, where at a
later period Mr. Phillips entered the mercantile business, continuing this occupation in
connection with farming until 1888, when he moved to Jasper and opened a general mercantile
establishment at this place. However at the present time he is engaged in farming, his
estate comprising 180 acres of fertile land on Little Buffalo Creek. He started out in life
with no capital, and what he now has is the result of his own shrewd management and push. He
has always been a Republican of pronounced type and has held the office of deputy county
sheriff for the last three years. He has attained to the chapter in the Masonic fraternity,
is interested in all educational and religious movements, and he and his wife are active
members of the Methodist Episcopal Church. Their children are as follows: Parmelia, who died
at the age of twelve years; Henry, who is county superintendent of schools; Sarah F., who
died at the age of six years; Louis, engaged in teaching, John, Nancy, Russell, and Sherman.
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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