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Note: enumerated 1820 US census Crosby, Hamilton Co, OH pg 63 as 1 wm >10, 1 wm 26-45, 2 wf >10, 3 wf 10-16, 1 wf 26-45 enumerated 1830 US census Union, Shelby Co, IN pg 389 as 1 wm >5, 1 wm 5-10, 1 wm 10-15, 1 wm 40-50, 1 wf 10-15, 1 wf 40-50 enumerated 1840 US census Shelby Co, IN pg 610 as 1 wm 10-15, 2 wm 15-20, 1 wm 20-30, 1 wm 50-60, 1 wf 5-10, 1 wf 50-60 enumerated 1850 US census Shelby Co, IN pg 395 house 14 as 65 yo SC, Catharine 66 KY, Nancy J Hotbrook - KY enumerated 1860 US census Shelby Co, IN pg 537 house 418 as 75 yo SC, Catharine 76 KY, James P 15 IN Robert Brown Robert Brown. Shelby county was very young, in fact had scarcely been organized when the first Brown entered her borders. Robert Brown, a native of North [?-RW] Carolina, was taken to Ohio by his parents in the early decades of the last century. After he grew up, he met Catherine Cotton, also of North Carolina, a girl about his own age and of just the type to make a good wife for a pioneer. They were married in Ohio in the twenties; came to Shelby County where they figured among the very first settlers of the northwestern tier of Townships. Robert Brown helped to lay off and build the original Shelbyville, when it's site presented the appearance of an irredeemable swamp. He took part in blazing the trail between Shelbyville and Rushville, through what would look to a "tenderfoot" as an impenetrable forest. As prime mover in driving stock and hauling produce to Lawrenceburg, he became a figure of importance for those days of long distances and poor transportation. The heavy hauling was done with ox teams and it took a week or more to make the trip to Cinncinati, which is now covered in an hour or two. Shortly after Robert Brown had made his appearance, his parents followed him into Shelby County, and there was quite a colony of new arrivals along the Little Blue River's banks, in Union Township. It included the Browns, old and young, the Cottons, and the Wickers. These three families were the first who located in that part of the county. It kept them all busy as bees to do the hard and exhaustive work that lasted for many years, and was a condition precedent to the later development which has given Shelby county such high rank in the agricultural world. By commanding a company of Home Guards, Robert Brown acquired the title of Captain, and rose to a position of considerable prominence in the community. All in all, he was fairly successful in a financial way; reared a large family successfully; and after a long and useful life was gathered to his fathers at the ripe old age of ninty-six. His wife was about eighty years old when she closed her eyes to this world and she was a fine type of the pioneer mother. The children of this worthy couple were: Nancy, Elizabeth, John W., Jane, Catherine, Mathew C., and William W., all dead but the last named. Chadwick's History of Shelby County, IN, p 366-367
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