THE HISTORY OF SOUTHERN ILLINOIS - 1912 |
Many of the prominent and valuable citizens of Louisville of the younger generation are men who were born and bred in Clay county and of such men Alsie N. Tolliver is a bright example. The familiar aphorism ’far off hills look greenest” has carried no weight with Mr. Tolliver, and he has been well content to devote his energies to the opportunities which presented themselves in his home town and county. The very agreeable degree of success which he has thus far experienced is ample evidence that his judgment of the future of Louisville was well founded.
Born in Clay county, October 12, 1870, Alsie N. Tolliver is the son of John H. and Margaret (Lauchner) Tolliver. The father was born in Lawrence county, Indiana, in 1844, while the mother was born in Tennessee in the same year. John H. Tolliver came to Illinois in the fifties, where he was occupied with farming interests for a number of years. He also became interested in the drug business, and was thus connected for a period of twenty years. He is still a resident of Clay county and is an honored and useful citizen. He is a veteran of the Civil war, serving three years in the Forty-fourth Illinois, and seeing much active service in the various campaigns he participated in. He is a Republican of strong and sturdy character and has ever been a faithful adherent of the party and an advocate of party interests. In his own town he has filled practically all the offices of a public character. The father of John H. Tolliver was Isom Tolliver, born in Indiana and there reared. He came to Illinois in the early fifties and entered upon government land, which he improved and worked as a farm of considerable value. He passed his life on the farm thus obtained and there died. He was a particularly successful man in his business, and was regarded as being exceptionally well-to-do for his day and age. Certain it is that he possessed a wide acquaintance in Southern Illinois and was prominent among the more important men P. 1277 of his time. The maternal grandfather of Alsie Tolliver was Daniel Lauchner, born in Tennessee, who came to Illinois in about 1850. He settled on an Illinois farm in Clay county and devoted the remainder of his life to farming pursuits, being known as one of the more solid and conservative men of his district.
Alsie Tolliver received his education in the
common schools of Clay county. Finishing his studies, he began life as
a teacher, and for ten years was thus occupied, in the meantime continuing
his own studies until in 1898 he gave up teaching and took up the study
of the law. In 1903 Mr. Tolliver was admitted to the bar, and he began
the practice of his profession in Louisville in the same year. Since that
time he has made his headquarters in Louisville and has built up a fine
and lucrative practice. He has been an important factor in the political
and civic life of the town, and has done much for the uplift of civic conditions
within the sphere of his activity. In 1906, only three years after his
admission to the bar, he was elected to the office of county judge on the
Republican ticket, of which party he is an enthusiastic supporter, and
again in 1910 he was re-elected to that important office. Mr. Tolliver
has filled that office in a manner wholly creditable to his ability as
member of the legal fraternity and as a citizen of unblemished integrity.
Always deeply interested in the fortunes of the Republican party, he has
been “up and doing’ for the cause since his earliest manhood, and since
his residence in Louisville has been prominently identified with the party
and its activities. He has been chosen to represent the party in its state
conventions on numerous occasions and his name is always to be found on
any committee of importance relative to the labors of that political body
in his county.
Mr. Tolliver and his family are members of the Baptist church of Louisville,
in which denomination he was reared by his parents, themselves members
of that church; and he is prominent in local Masonic circles. He is a member
of the Chapter and has been through all the chairs of the blue lodge.
On June 15, 1892, Mr. Tolliver was united in marriage with Miss
Elizabeth Bryan, daughter of Josiah Bryan, an early settler of. Clay
county, of which he is still an honored resident. He was actively engaged
in farming for years, but is now retired, and is passing his declining
years in the enjoyment of the fruits of his labors of earlier years. Six
children have been born to Mr. and Mrs. Tolliver, and all are attendants
of the Louisville schools. The wife and mother passed away, and Mr. Tolliver
was subsequently united in marriage with Miss Rachel Kincaid, daughter
of Jonathan Kincaid, of Clay county, prominent in his district for
many years as a stock-raiser and agriculturist of considerable importance.
Of this latter union, one child has been born.
Feb 27 2009
Copyright © Jan 1999 - Present D. Williams;
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