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Transcribed from "An Illustrated History of The Big Bend Country, embracing Lincoln, Douglas, Adams and Franklin counties, State of Washington",  published by Western Historical Publishing Co., 1904.


     JAMES M. KENNEDY is a well-known stock man residing on Cow creek, four miles north of Hooper postoffice, Adams county, Washington.
     Born in Madison county, Kentucky, January 12, 1830, he was a son of Thomas S. and Evaline (Hawkins) Kennedy natives also of Kentucky, in which state they lived until 1842, when they removed to Clay county, Missouri, and later to Clinton county, where they died.  The father was a blacksmith and wagon maker by trade, and was survived several years by the mother, who lived to an extreme old age.  They were parents of nine children, Nancy, James M., Esther, Sarah, Elizabeth, Ebenezer, Martha, Thomas S., and one who died in infancy.
     James M. Kennedy was born on soil made historic by the life and activity of Daniel Boone, and he had for his early neighbors a great many old inhabitants who had been intimately associated with that great pathfinder.  Until arriving at the age of twenty, Mr. Kennedy attended the common schools, both of his native state and Missouri, and at the same time assisted his father with his work.  He left home to make his own fortune at the age mentioned, and was one of the historic "forty-niners" of California, he having crossed the plains with a train of ox teams during the year 1849.  The train, which was known as the "Hell Town Train," and commanded by Captain George Goddard, started out from Missouri with provisions to last two years, and experienced many trials and adversities before finally arriving at its destination, viz., the gold fields of the "Golden State."  Here Mr. Kennedy engaged in placer mining until 1858.  He served through the Modoc Indian war of 1857, and in 1858 he started for the Fraser river mining region, where he mined until 1861, when he went to the Cariboo district and there mined until 1864.  He was always considered a "lucky" miner and during his operations made a great amount of money.  For putting through one ditch, while engaged in placer mining in California, he received twelve thousand dollars, and in 1864 he received nine thousand dollars in return for his work in British Columbia.  After leaving British Columbia, he, in partnership with Henry Haws, purchased for sixteen thousand dollars, a pack train of one hundred and thirty animals.  This he brought to Kootenai, Idaho, where he sold his interest in the train and opened a store.  He remained here until 1868, when he went to Walla Walla and engaged in the sheep business.  He drove his sheep to the Montana markets, disposed of them and dealt for several years in beef cattle.  He came to his present locality in 1877 and purchased thirteen hundred head of cattle, a quarter-section of railroad land and pre-empted one hundred and sixty acres more.  Here he lived five years, when, in 1880, he filed a homestead claim on the land where his residence now stands.  Subsequently he has continued to add to his holdings in land until he now owns eight thousand acres.  All of his land is fenced and cross fenced,--a total of thirty miles of fence being in use on his land.  In addition to his own land he leases for pasturage three sections of school land.  He at one time owned three thousand head of cattle, but during the winter of 1881-82 he lost heavily, since which time he has raised on an average of only between five hundred and six hundred head.  He has one of the greatest hay ranches in the state, harvesting each year about six hundred tons of hay.  He keeps a large herd of horses, has first-class farm buildings on his ranch and an excellent orchard.  Cow creek divides his farm, so that every month in the year his meadows are kept well watered by a running stream.
     In 1883, after an absence of thirty years, Mr. Kennedy took a trip to his old Kentucky home.  There the transition that had taken place was enough to bewilder the most wildly imaginative.  The mother was still living but the father had long since departed this life; what thirty years before was little better than a wilderness of forest and plain, was a thickly peopled commonwealth, and almost every one to him was a total stranger.
     Mr. Kennedy is a Democrat politically, but his political belief rests on a broad plain and he is decidedly liberal and conservative in his views.  He is one of the most highly respected and substantial citizens of Adams county.
 
 

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