JAMES R. LOVE
JAMES R. LOVE. Well known as a successful farmer of Red river and esteemed as
a citizen of the Riverland community is James R. Love, whose name appears at
the introduction to this brief sketch. For a quarter of a century have his
labors contributed to his own material expansion as well as to Clay county's
development, and his presence here has given an impetus to the promotion of
the public weal. Thirty-six years in the Lone Star state, connected with its
agricultural interests and contributing to its intelligent population, is the
record of James R. Love. He reached the state in 1867, a settler from McMinn
county, Tennessee, where his birth occurred September 5, 1831. His parents
were John M. and M. M. (Jameson) Love, native Virginia people
who immigrated to Tennessee in early life where the wife and mother soon
passed away. Their family consisted of George J., once a quartz mill
man in California where he died, leaving a child in San Francisco;
Martha died in Tennessee as the wife of S. E. Browder; John W.
B. who died in Texas; Nancy M. married Matthew Potter and
died in Benton county, Texas; and James R., our worthy subject.
James R. Love acquired a fair education in the country district of his day,
and assumed the serious responsibilities of life at about eighteen years of
age. Having been a farmer's son he began life as a farmer himself, working for
wages until his accumulations enabled him to attempt a more independent life.
He was sober, industrious and ambitious and worked year after year without
loss of time. In 1861 he married Annis, a daughter of Absalom
Armstrong, a native of old Virginia, and with his young wife made this
time count, as best he could, during and after the Civil war. When they cast
their fortunes in Collin county land and were industrious farmers there until
1880, when he sold his farm and came to Clay county. Here Mrs. Love died in
1890, after helping to make a home on the raw but fertile prairie on Red
river. Their first residence was a mere "dugout" and in this they lived just
as happily and as contended as they did after their new and more modern home
was erected. Corn, cotton and wheat have been the chief products of their
farm. His tract of five hundred and fifty acres is an estate worthy many years
of effort and on it he has lived well and made farming pay.
Mr. and Mrs. Love were companions together for twenty-nine years. She was born
in 1837 and died leaving an issue of John A., of south Texas, a
locomotive engineer; Robert S., of Motley county, Texas; Florence
A., wife of J. W. Owens, of the same county; George F., of
Beaver county, Oklahoma; and Sallie K., who married Alfred M.
Smith and resides in Canon City, Texas.
Mr. Love did not do military duty during the rebellion, being situated so that
his services as a civilian were of more import to his community than they
would have been as a soldier. In early life he was a Whig, but became a
Democrat on the issues of slavery and the war, and has remained so since, but
yielding to the demands of the public service and supporting the best
qualified men for local office. He managed the election in his precinct in
Clay county for fifteen years and has served as school trustee. In domestic
matters he has been a home-stayer, not even attending as much as the important
sessions of his Masonic lodge, but went to the meetings of the Methodist
church, where he holds a membership regularly, unless ill health prevented.
B. B. Paddock, History and Biographical Record of North and West
Texas (Chicago: Lewis Publishing Co., 1906), Vol. I, p. 657.
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