Bucks County PA Archives Biographies.....Barbiere, General Joseph ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/pafiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Joe Patterson, Patricia Bastik & Susan Walters Dec 2009 Source: History of Bucks County, Pennsylvania; edited by J.H. Battle; A. Warner & Co.; 1887 Doylestown A-L GENERAL JOSEPH BARBIERE journalist, P.O. Doylestown, was born in New York, November 27, 1831, son of Joseph and Floise (Ouvre) Barbiere, natives of Marseilles, France, and of Boston, Mass. His father, a professor of music, came to New York in 1827, and from there went south. He was buried in Memphis, Tenn. Our subject's grandfathers were soldiers under Lafayette at Yorktown, and his paternal grandfather in the French revolution. When our subject was six years of age, his parents moved to New Orleans, thence to Mississippi, and in 1843 to Memphis. He received only a common-school education. He engaged in the auction and commission business, stationed for a period at New Orleans, served on the staff of the Memphis "Avalanche," read law in Memphis, was one of the three commissioners selected by the south in 1860 to advocate direct trade with Europe, and while in Europe was presented with a magnificent antique ewer, by the Board of Free Traders of Belgium. On his return he received the thanks of the city of Memphis and the legislature of his state, and was delegated to the national convention at Baltimore in 1860. At the outbreak of the war General Barbiere organized a company, and was engaged in the battles of New Madrid, Mo., and Island No. 10; was captured and sent to Camp Chase, and thence to Johnson's Island. While confined in this prison he wrote a book which was used as a weapon in driving him from a position which he had not solicited in the United States Pension office at Philadelphia. After his exchange he was appointed major, then colonel, then transferred to the cavalry - "Barbiere's battalion" - and then appointed inspector-general. After four years' service he was paroled by General Chrysler. He was tried for high treason, and acquitted. On proof of his kindness to Union men in Alabama his disabilities were removed by congress. He then went into the law with Judges John E. R. Ray and John W. Smith. Soon after he returned to journalism, and organized and aided in establishing the "Mechanic," "Eclectic," "Independent," "Presbyterian," "Evening News" and "Daily Democrat." In 1875 he was elected vice-president, and again president, 1876, of the Tennessee Press Association. While commissioner he was selected to deliver the centennial address for Tennessee by Governor Porter. He was a correspondent of the American Newspaper Union at the Centennial. He aided in establishing the National Newspaper Union at Philadelphia. He established the "Atlantic Times," in Atlantic City, the "Ambler, Pa., Times" now "Gazette," and was on the staff of the German "Democrat" and "Thoroughbred Stock Journal," of Philadelphia, and lately he has edited the "Lonsdale, Pa., Democrat." He lectured on "Temperance" in New England and in the south, and also obtained a patent for an iron wheel. He was married in 1855 to Mary G Levett, by whom he had four children, of whom one is living: Eloise, wife of J. F. Gentry, residing in Clifton Heights, Delaware county, Pa. His wife died in 1867, and he was again married in 1868 to Lucie Levett, by whom he has had three children: Levett D., with Doylestown "Democrat;" Francis J. and Marguerette. General and Mrs. Barbiere and family are members of the Presbyterian church of Doylestown. He is also a Mason, and is a member of the Scientific Association of France. He was appointed captain of the Sixth Letter of Marque issued by the Confederate states. He was elected in 1859 an honorary member of the "Phi Mu" Society of the La Grange Term - Synodical College. As an author General Barbiere has written several books, "Scraps from the Prison Table," "Polaria," "The Confederate Conscript," "A Commerical Dictionary," "Fifty Years on the Mississippi," "The Question is a Nut-Shell," an economic work. Our subject is connected by marriage with one of the oldest and most respected families in Bucks county, the Abiah R. James branch of the James family. He is a staunch believer in a protective tariff and in the necessity for maintaining a strong government.