Barret, James A. (Barrett)
b. March 4, 1818, in Greensburg, Kentucky; d. January 18, 1895, in Warfield, Kentucky. Barret came to Sangamon County, Illinois
in 1835, and farmed with his father near Island Grove. He later purchased a farm southwest
of Springfield. Barret served as a deputy clerk of the Sangamon County Circuit Court during the 1840s. He was a soldier in
the
Mexican War and served under Colonel Edward D. Baker in the Fourth Illinois Regiment. Barret was wounded at Cerro Gordo, Mexico
on
April 18, 1847. He married Eliza B. Anderson of Greensburgh, Kentucky, on June 1, 1848. They had two sons, Anderson Lee and
James
Douglas. Barret was elected as a director of the Sangamo Insurance Company in May 1857, and was elected to the board of directors
of the Pana and Springfield Railroad in October 1859. In 1850, Barret was a farmer with real estate valued at $30,000. By
1860,
his real estate was worth $180,000 and he possessed personal property valued at $8,000. During the Civil War, Barret organized
the
Tenth Illinois Cavalry to replace regiments being withdrawn from their regular duty among the Indians on the plains. After
the war
he became interested in coal and salt manufacturing along the Big Sandy River in Eastern Kentucky.
Daily Illinois State Journal (Springfield, Illinois), 5 May 1857, 3:1; 26 October 1859, 2:1; Daily
Illinois State Register (Springfield, Illinois), 24 January 1895, 5:3; Illinois Journal
(Springfield, Illinois), 27 July 1848, 3:4; Sangamo Journal (Springfield, Illinois), 20 May 1847, 2:3; Sangamon
County, Illinois, Seventh Census of the United States, 1850; Sangamon County, Illinois, Eighth Census of the United States,
1860.