Early Life and Times of Boone County, Indiana, published May 1877, republished 1974
JOSEPH F. DAUGHERTY Mr. Daugherty, one of the pioneer merchants of
the county,
was born in Ohio, in the year 1814. Came to Eagle Village, this county,
in the year 1838,
where he was engaged in selling goods for a term of years, in fact, as long
as there was
any village there, perhaps up to 1853, when Zionsville sprung up and the
building of the
railroad there, when he, with A.P. Nicholas, his former partner in the village,
commenced
business in Zionsville and were in business there several years, when he
went to Kokomo,
and there his wife, Mariah Daugherty, died, as good a woman as ever lived
in Boone
County. Her name was Mariah Campbell. They were married about the year
1836 or
1838. The following are their childrens names: Adelaide, William
W., James, Francis
and Joseph. James died in infancy at Eagle Village, in 1844. William W.
has been for
years in the regular army as captain, in the 18th Regulars, and is now at
this writing (1886)
at Fort Lewis, Colorado. Joseph is also there in the county as a farmer.
Mr. Dickerson
was, while living in the village, captain of the Eagle Village Light Infantry,
a military
organization formed there back in the forties. He was, it is said, the
best posted man of his
day in the county. Was nominated for the state legislature in 1848, but
was defeated by
the Hon. Henry M. Marvin. Mr. Dickerson is now, and has been for years,
a resident of
the city of Indianapolis; is in his seventy-fourth year, quite well preserved
and looks
younger than that. He was an old Whig up to 1826; since that time has acted
with the
Republican party. In person Mr. Dickerson is of medium size, dark hair,
good features,
well made, and in his best days would weigh 175 pounds. Mrs. Dickerson
is buried at
Kokomo. Should you visit her grave you might truthfully say: "Here
rests one of the
noblest women that ever lived in Boone County."
DAUGHTERY NICHOLAS CAMPBELL MARVIN