A. L. Carnahan and Joseph David Hall
A. L.
Carnahan was reared near
Bradyville in Cannon County. He attended community schools and
later graduated from Winchester Normal.
In 1897 he
bought the David Batey farm and moved into the Kittrell
Community. He soon became one of the active leaders in church,
school, and civic affairs.
He was a
member of the School Board for some time and was influential in
getting a high school located at Kittrell. He was a member of
Science Hill Church of Christ. He was elected magistrate for the
19th Civil District and held that office for several years. In
1918 he was elected County Judge, and presided over the
Rutherford County Court for some time.
Dr. Joseph David
Hall
Dr. J. D. Hall, son of Franklin D. Hall
and Elizabeth McCrackin Hall, spent all of his life on the farm,
"Piedmont," at the foot of Pilot Knob where his grandfather,
David Hall, settled in 1818. His great-grandfather, Jonathan
Hall, came to Rutherford County from Virginia in 1806 and
settled a few miles away on Stones River and later on Cripple
Creek.
Dr. Hall was
born in 1854 and grew up during the difficult years of the Civil
War. As a child he walked three miles each day to and from "Pap"
Huddleston's school at Readyville. When Science Hill Academy
started on his father's farm, he went to school there. The
curriculum was extremely broad for those days.
The principal
was a highly educated man, a graduate of Princeton University.
He also had some well-educated assistants. They offered Greek,
Latin, science, trigonometry, calculus, in addition to the usual
subjects of English, history, and geography. He took all these
subjects. He worked on his father's farm and saved his money.
When he
finished school at the Academy, he apprenticed himself to Dr. A.
P. McCullough at Milton for two years. In those days they called
it, "Reading medicine under an old Doctor."
When he was
not helping Dr. McCullough with his patients, he worked in a
drug store and learned about medicine. In 188 he entered
Vanderbilt Medical School and graduated in 1883. One of his
classmates begged him to go into a partnership with him in
Nashville, but he chose rather to come home and become a country
doctor.
In December,
1883, he married Miss Ella Lowe. They continued to live with his
mother and father.
In the early
days of his practice, he road horseback with saddlebags across
his saddle. He always kept good horses. "Old Joe," a sixteen
hands, strawberry roan which he rode for thirty years, was
considered one of the best walking horses ever in Rutherford
County. In the 1890's he began using a buggy some, and about
1914 he got a car.
His practice
had a wide range from the Bradyville to the Hall's Hill Pikes,
and from 1920 when the last doctor left Readyville, he was the
only doctor between Murfreesboro and Woodbury. The nights were
never too dark, nor the weather too bad for him to go when he
was called.
He was a
member of the Church of Christ, a Mason, and was active in all
civic and community affairs.
He was an
avid reader and was well posted on many subjects, especially on
things pertaining to the medical profession. He belonged to the
A. M. A., State and County Medical Associations, and served as
President of Rutherford County Medical Society at one time. He
was always interested in politics, and served on the County
Democratic Committee.
After
practicing medicine for over fifty-five years he died of
pneumonia at the age of eighty-four, and is buried in the garden
of his home, "Piedmont."
Kittrell | Rutherford County |
Tennessee
Source: Rutherford County Historical
Society, Publication No. 2, winter, 1973.
|