Difference between revisions of "Edmund Hogan"
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(New page: '''Edmund Hogan''' may have been the first permanent white settler on land that would one day become Little Rock, Arkansas. Hogan arrived in 1818. He was preceded by several other sett...) |
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− | '''Edmund Hogan''' may have been the first permanent white settler on land that would one day become [[Little Rock]], Arkansas. Hogan arrived in 1818. He was preceded by several other settlers in what would become [[Pulaski County]], including [[John Gozel]], [[John Pyeatt]], and [[ | + | '''Edmund Hogan''' may have been the first permanent white settler on land that would one day become [[Little Rock]], Arkansas. Hogan arrived in 1818. He was preceded by several other settlers in what would become [[Pulaski County]], including [[John Gozel]], [[John Pyeatt]], and [[Jacob Pyeatt]]. Hogan settled near what would become known as [[Pyeattstown]]. Hogan became a justice of the peace in the county. |
==References== | ==References== |
Latest revision as of 12:14, 12 June 2009
Edmund Hogan may have been the first permanent white settler on land that would one day become Little Rock, Arkansas. Hogan arrived in 1818. He was preceded by several other settlers in what would become Pulaski County, including John Gozel, John Pyeatt, and Jacob Pyeatt. Hogan settled near what would become known as Pyeattstown. Hogan became a justice of the peace in the county.
References
- Dallas Tabor Herndon, Centennial History of Arkansas (Chicago, IL: S.J. Clarke Pub. Co., 1922), 797.