History of Hendricks County, Indiana, her people, industries and institutions . never taken an active in-terest in the general campaigns of his party. He and the members of hisfamily are adherents of the Missionary Baptist church and contribute gen-erously of their means to its support. Mr. Stevenson is a very pleasant manto meet and he is in every sense of the word one of the sterling representa-tives of the twentieth-century man of affairs of Hendricks county. HARRY E. SANDERS. It is always pleasant and profitable to contemplate the career of a manwho has won a definite goal in life, whose c
History of Hendricks County, Indiana, her people, industries and institutions . never taken an active in-terest in the general campaigns of his party. He and the members of hisfamily are adherents of the Missionary Baptist church and contribute gen-erously of their means to its support. Mr. Stevenson is a very pleasant manto meet and he is in every sense of the word one of the sterling representa-tives of the twentieth-century man of affairs of Hendricks county. HARRY E. SANDERS. It is always pleasant and profitable to contemplate the career of a manwho has won a definite goal in life, whose career has been such as to com-mend him to the honor and respect of his fellow citizens. Such, in brief, isthe record of the well-known agriculturist whose name appears at the headof this brief review, than whom a more whole-souled or popular man it wouldbe difficult to find within the limits of Hendricks countv, where he has longmaintained his home and where he has labored not only for his own indi-vidual interests and that of his immediate family, but also for the improve-. HARRY E. SANDERS HENDRICKS COUNTY, INDIANA. 721 ment and welfare of the entire community, whose interests he has ever hadat heart. Harry E. Sanders, the son of Henry and Juha A. (Gossett) Sanders,was born in , October lo, 1870. His father was a nativeof Fayette county. Ohio, his birth occurring there in July, 1826, while hismother was born in North Carolina in January, 1828. Henry Sanders cameto Indiana in 1836 with his parents, settling in Washington township, thiscounty, and here Henry Sanders was reared, grew to manhood and, in Oc-tober, 1847, was married to Julia A. Gossett, and to this union were bornseven children: Alva W., of Galveston, Texas, who is connected with theshipping industry of that city; Mrs. Mary A. Zeller, who was born in 1850,was twice married, both of her husbands being now deceased, and she hasthree children living; Mrs. Emma E. McGrew, whose husband is deceased,ha
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