Washington Co., AR - Biographies - James M. Chandler *********************************************** This file was contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by: The Goodspeed Publishing Co Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgenwebarchives.org *********************************************** James M. Chandler, merchant at Evansville, Ark., is the son of Jacob and Elizabeth (Reeder) Chandler. The father was born in Kentucky in 1793, and when a child moved with his parents to Tennessee, where he married Miss Reeder. About 1825 he and his family moved west of the Mississippi River, locating in the territory now occupied by the Choctaws, but two years later they moved in the vicinity of Evansville, where the father died in 1876. He was a farmer all his life, a Democrat in politics, and for many years was justice of the peace. The mother died when quite young (1836), and was but thirty-six years of age. Both were members of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. Their family consisted of eight children, six now living. The youngest son, and the subject of this sketch, was reared a farmer boy, and received his education in the subscription school, also at Cane Hill College. At the age of eighteen he began teaching in the Cherokee Nation at $33 1/3 per month, but thinking that he could not rise in the profession he hired as clerk in a store for $12 per month. After working for his employer until almost as much was due him as the stock was worth, he and a partner, N. B. Dunhurg, took the stock in 1853 and began merchandising at Dutch Mills. Soon after he moved to Wilsonville, one and a half miles north of Evansville, and here carried on farming in connection with merchandising. In 1856 he married Miss Margaret L. Morrow, daughter of Rev. George Morrow, and to them was born one son, William M. Mrs. Chandler died in 1861, and four years later Mr. Chandler married Miss Helen M., daughter of Rev. Young Ewing. This union resulted in the birth of five children: Charles H., Addie D., Lulu E., Lillie and James E. In 1862 Mr. Chandler enlisted in the Confederate army, and served in the commissary department most of the time until the close of the war. In 1867 he opened a store in Evansville, and has operated the same ever since. He was also postmaster at Evansville, for five years, is a Democrat in politics, and he and wife are members of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. He owns 100 acres of land, a good store, and has made it all by his own industry.