42 HISTORY OF CLAY COUNTY 21st of September, son of John and Elizabeth (Adamson) Bogle. His father was born in Washington county, that state, on the 26th of March, 1822, and died in Bowling Green, Clay county, July 10, 1891. By trade he was what is known as a carriage-body builder, and followed that vocation at Waveland until 1859, when he located on a farm about a mile east of Carbon. But the more stirring ways of business and the manufactures were more suited to his temperament than the quieter life of the husbandman, and in 1860 he located in Bowling Green, forming a partnership With Elisha Adamson, his father-in-law, in the milling busi- ness. After thus operating the enterprise for a number of years Mr. Bogle founded the first furniture manufactory in Clay county, conducting it for some three years. During his residence in Bowling Green he was also quite a prominent public figure, his twelve years of service as justice of the peace making a most honorable official record, He was a stanch Democrat, who vigorously upheld the Union cause during the Civil war, and a Mason in good standing with the Bowling Green lodge. His widow was born in Rockville, Parke county, Indiana, and is now living with her son of this sketch, an honored pioneer mother in her seventy-sixth year. Her marriage to the elder Mr. Bogle occurred in the village of her birth, and of their union were two sons and three daughters, of whom the fol- lowing are living: Jerome, the oldest of the family, and John L. Bogle. Jerome Bogle received a common school education, and quite early in life learned the trade of carriage painting, following that vocation until 1884. He then located in Brazil and engaged in the grocery and baking business. He was for some time, earlier in his busy career, an employee of the first carriage and agricultural house in Clay countv, the output of the concern being entirely hand-work. Although the road was long, it was continuously upward from the time that he worked for twenty-five cents per day until he reached the position of a leading merchant of the county. He is also a leading fraternalist, enjoying membership in the following organizations: Brazil lodge No. 264, A. F. & A. M.; Brazil chapter No. 59, R. A. M.; Brazil council No. 40, R. & S. M.; Brazil commandery No. 47, K. T., and the Knights of Pythias order, No. 30. In his political affiliations he is a Republican, and has long been a stanch Methodist. The Bogle family came originally from Virginia, both the great- grandfather and grandfather of Jerome being natives of Wythe county. The former was Ralph Bogle, whose wife was a sister of Richard Henry Lee, and the latter, James Bogle, the younger man being born January 16, 1796, and dying June 22, 1879. The grandfather married Miss Mary Clemens, born September 29, 1793, who died in Indianapolis, Indiana, on the 1st of November, 1866. The great-uncle of our subject, John Bogle, was a well-known circuit rider of the M. E. church. His son, the uncle, was a soldier of the Confederacy, and was attached to the body guard of the famous cavalry officer, General John H. Morgan. In 1863 he par- ticipated in the historic raid into Kentucky, Ohio and Indiana, and was with General Morgan when he was captured. Mr. Bogle escaped by swimming the Ohio river, his superior officer being confined in the Ohio penitentiary for some time before his escape. On the 5th of October, 1876, Jerome Bogle wedded Emma H. Cole, a native of Cloverdale, Indiana, born on the same day of the month eighteen years before. She is the daughter of Samuel S. and Elizabeth (Egnor) Cole, her father being a native of Hamilton, Ohio, and her