HENDERSON CO. TX - Biography - Dr. Percy Larkin ***************************************** This file was contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by: Bunny Shumate Freeman Fourls1223@aol.com Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm ***************************************** Dr. Percy Larkin Mayor of Athens, Athens, TX Two generation ago, the Larkin family resided in Virginia. The grandfather of our subject was born in that state, and enjoyed the influences wrought there in his rearing. He moved from there to Tennessee, then to Alabama, then to Texas. He came to Texas in an early day when there were no railroads, the population was sparse and the present condition of development was undreamed of. W. C. Larkin was his son and was born and reared in Tennessee, but also moved to Texas in an early day. He married a Miss Holloway in 1859. Five children were born unto them, four of whom are yet living. W. C. Larkin was a physician also, did a wide practice in the early days of Athens and Henderson Co., and is one of the old landmarks whose memory is yet green in the minds of many citizens. The Larkin family succeeded well on commercial lines and accumulated large property for those days and enjoyed the esteem of the people socially and commercially. February 22, 1862 in the home near Athens, Percy was born. He is therefore, on his native heath, a typical Texas product. He grew up a Texas boy, genial as a sun’s ray, hunted, fished and worked on the farm and went to school. He grew up full of sunshine and affability. His father being a physician, right early he also decided to follow in his footsteps and so began the preparation for this line of life. He chose the Kentucky School of Medicine, in Louisville, Ky., as his professional Alma Mater, where he took his course, and began active professional life in his own country and among his friends and kindred in the year 1890. The first of December, 1887, he married Miss Collins. Three children have been born unto them, one is living, two have already been taken away, one having passed away, only a few weeks since. It was after we met the Doctor, who had been as full of sunshine as a June day, turning his hand to every good cause for the development of Athens, and Henderson county, appearing as if no cloud ever passed the horizon of his life and no thorns had been permitted to grown in his pathway. After meeting him again after a short absence, his face was beclouded, his eyes had been bedimmed with tears, and upon a question of his welfare, he remarked with an unusual tenderness “My baby has been taken from me.” I knew it all then, and could here the music of the little feet, and the prattle of the little tongue and see the grace of the little form as they faded away. Yes, they are gone, but their memory, still clusters about us, and their dimpled hands beckon us onward and upward. Dr. Larkin having been born and reared in the county, and being of genial disposition, has made many friend, few men are more popular with all classes that he. He has built up a good practice to which he gives his best attention but he has succeeded financially in other lines and has acquired some elegant city property in Athens, is a director in the First National Bank, and has other interests. He has recently erected a modern and most elegant home on a choice lot in the city. At the last election he was chosen Mayor, which office he graces with discretion and judgment. on our visit to the city and upon a presentation of our work for the advancement of his county and city, he readily took hold of it, with the remark, that it was a good proposition for this county and that he was in for anything for her advancement. He has rendered us every assistance reasonable, and withal, has impressed us as one of the wide awake citizens of that country and as a useful officer in the mayoralty of the city. The doctor is now forty, strong and healthy, in the prime of life with a useful profession and a growing income. We cannot but express the wish that many good things may yet come to him. The Southland. Waco, Texas February, 1903 VOL. Xl No 1