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IV Henry Massey Rector

IV Henry Massey Rector

Female

Generations:      Standard    |    Vertical    |    Compact    |    Box    |    Text    |    Ahnentafel    |    Fan Chart    |    Media    |    PDF

Generation: 1

  1. 1.  IV Henry Massey Rector (daughter of III Henry Massey Rector).

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  III Henry Massey Rector was born in Little Rock, AR (son of Jr. Henry Massey Rector); died in Little Rock, AR.

    Notes:

    Attorney in Little Rock

    Children:
    1. 1. IV Henry Massey Rector


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Jr. Henry Massey Rector was born in Little Rock, AR (son of Henry Massey Rector and Elizabeth Jane Field); died in Little Rock, AR.
    Children:
    1. 2. III Henry Massey Rector was born in Little Rock, AR; died in Little Rock, AR.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Henry Massey Rector was born on 1 May 1816 in Louisville, Jefferson County, KY (son of Elias Rector and Fanny Badello Thruston); died on 12 Aug 1899 in Little Rock, AR.

    Notes:

    1. How does Gov. Henry Massey Rector tie into the descendents of the
    early Virginia Rectors? His aunt was Ann Rector who married Thomas
    Conway. (They were married in Greene Co., Tennessee, the home of John B.
    Rector and his wife Rebecca Sevier.) Two sons of Thomas and Ann Rector
    Conway were governors of Arkansas too...James Sevier Conway (No. 1) and
    Elias Nelson Conway. Son Henry Wharton Conway was a territorial
    Congressman from Arkansas. Ann's nephew was a US Senator.
    2. Does anyone know how to obtain a copy of RECTOR RECORDS by King?

    John Fishback (Johannes Fishbach] of the 1714 Colony, moved from
    Germantown to Jeffersonton, Culpeper County, Virginia. He was the
    progenitor of five governors of States:

    James Lawson Kemper (Virginia)
    James Sevier Conway (Arkansas)
    Elias Nelson Conway (Arkansas)
    Henry Massey Rector (Arkansas)
    William Meade Fishbach (Arkansas)

    From Arkansas History Commission- March 2, 1934 Henry M.
    Rector, sixth governor of the State of Arkansas, was born in
    Louisville, Kentucky, May 1, 1816, a son of Elias and Fannie B.
    ( Thurston) Rector. Soon after his birth his family moved to St.
    Louis, MO, where Elias Rector died in 1822. Subsequently
    the widow married Stephen Trigg and removed to Saline County,
    MO. Here Mr. Twiggs engaged in the manufacture of salt.
    From the time that he was 13 until he was 17 years of age, it
    was Henry's task to haul wood with an ox team to the salt works.
    During this time he had no opportunity to attend school, but his
    mother, who was an educated woman, taught him the rudiments of
    an English education
    [2613] In 1833 his Kentucky relatives sent him to Francis Goddard's
    school in Louisville where he remained a student for two years
    and then came to Arkansas to look after certain lands, which he,
    as the only surviving child, had inherited from his father. Some
    of the land in question is now a part of the Hot Springs
    Reservation, which had been located upon the New Madrid
    Certificate. Many years were spent in prosecution this claim
    against other persons, and finally against the United States
    Government, but Rector was unsuccessful in his efforts to
    establish title to his claim.

    [2614] During the years 1839 and 1840 Rector held a position as a
    teller in a bank of the State of Arkansas. In 1841 he moved to a
    farm in Saline County where he began to study law. From 1843 to
    1845 he was United States Marshal for the District of Arkansas.
    He was then admitted to the bar and began the practice of his
    profession in Little Rock, Arkansas, but soon returned to Saline
    Co. In 1848 he was elected to the State Senate for the district
    composed of Perry and Saline Counties. He was Surveyor General
    from 1853 to 1857: was elected to the lower house of the
    legislature from Pulaski county in 1854 and in 1859 was elected
    Associate Justice of the Supreme Court by the General Assembly.

    [2615] In 1860 he resigned his position on the Supreme Bench to become
    an independent Democratic candidate for governor. What was
    known as the " Conway-Johnson Dynasty" was thought to be all
    powerful in Arkansas politics. Rector, however, was a forcible
    and convincing orator. By his persuasive eloquence and his
    appeal to the common sense of the voters, he overthrew the "
    Dynasty " and was elected by over a 2000 majority. There was the
    a paper called The Independent published at Fayetteville by
    William Quesenbury - popularly known as "Bill Cush" who was
    very clever cartoonist. Immediately after the election he
    published a cartoon entitled, "Tom Dick and Harry" in which
    Thomas Hubbard, the Wig candidate, was represented as Old Mother
    Hubbard examining a bare cupboard, Dick Johnson was seated
    astride a whiskey barrel surrounded by a crowd of his supporters
    to who he was explaining how it happened to his supporters,
    while "Harry" Rector represented as a rooster was strutting
    about and making a welkin ring with his crowing. (Welkin means
    in the sky )

    [2616] Professor Shinn in his " Pioneers and Makers of Arkansas says: "
    the regular Democrats smarting under their defeat, took an undue
    advantage of him in the convention of 1861 The body, while
    providing for a new constitution which contained certain offices
    in force, intentionally or unintentionally omitted to make any
    provision whatever for the Governor's office. Rector's adherents
    have always claimed that this was done intentionally and from
    the meager records which have come down to posterity, it is
    entirely safe to say that this contention of Rector's friend was
    true. All the events, it was claimed that, as the constitution
    did not provide for a Governor, a vacancy existed, which
    contention was upheld by the Supreme Court. He served as
    Governor from Nov. 15, 1860 to Nov. 4, 1862."

    [2617] Upon retiring from his governor's office, Mr. Rector enlisted as
    a private in the Confederate Reserve Corp ( refusing an
    appointment as quartermaster ) and served until the close of the
    war. For several years after the war he engaged in agriculture
    pursuits in Garland County. He was delegate from the County to
    the Constitutional Convention in 1874 and wielded a powerful
    influence in framing the new organic law of Arkansas. He died at
    his home in the City of Little Rock on August 12, 1899.

    [2618] Governor Rector was twice married. His first wife, whom he was
    united in Oct. 1838, was Miss Jane Elizabeth, daughter of
    William Field, of Little Rock. She died November 20, 1857,
    leaving four sons and three daughters, and in 1860 he married
    Miss Ernestine Flore Linde, daughter of Albert Linde, of
    Memphis, Tenn. One daughter was born of the second marriage.
    -----------------------------------------------------------------

    [2619] His son Henry Massie Rector MD was good in his profession in
    Little Rock Arkansas Henry Massie 111 was a lawyer in Little
    Rock Also Henry Massie Rector 4th and 5th lived in Little
    Rock. Henry Massie Rector 111

    From HISTORY OF THE SESCENDANTS OF J.J. RECTOR. As Governor of
    Arkansas, Henry Massie Rector, was called upon by the U.S.
    Government to supply troops for the Civil War, refused to send
    troops to help the North. When he was turned out of office by
    the people, he joined the Confederate Army as a private and to
    show his contempt for Lincoln bought a slave in 1863. After the
    war he retired to his plantation in Ark, His son Elias W.
    Rector Married Rosebud Alcorn daughter of the Governor of Miss.

    [2622] This publication has the information that is in the History of
    J.J. Rector and also contains a letter by Henry Massie to John
    Ross Chief of the Cherokee Indians promising support for him and
    at the same time hoping that Ross would stand by the South who
    could supply him Slaves to develop the Cherokee Indians. The
    Indians should support the South as Lincoln was planning on
    using the Cherokee Nation as a home for abolitionists and
    northern moneyed people. Chief Ross said that their natural
    feelings was for the South but the U.S. (north) had promised
    the Indians security and the treaties were with Washington and
    they felt that they had to stay neutral.

    [2625] This morning Governor Rector of Arkansas issued a proclamation,
    drafting into immediate service every man in the State subject
    to military duty to respond in twenty days.

    Henry married Elizabeth Jane Field in 1838. Elizabeth died on 20 Nov 1857. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Elizabeth Jane Field died on 20 Nov 1857.
    Children:
    1. Elias W. Rector
    2. 4. Jr. Henry Massey Rector was born in Little Rock, AR; died in Little Rock, AR.