Judge James McCaskill is an
attorney of some fourteen years' experience, and is a lawyer of thorough preparatory
training, both literary and professional. He was born in what is now Cleveland County,
Ark., in 1849, within one mile and a half of where he now lives, being a son of Hugh G.
and Elvira (Baggett) McCaskill, natives respectively of Simpson County, Miss., and
Alabama, the former's birth occurring in 1821, and his death in Cleveland County, Ark.,
November 16, 1888, on the old homestead on which he first settled on coming to the county
from Mississippi in 1847. He first became a resident of the State in 1839, coming here
with his parents, Daniel and Ruth (Graham) McCaskill, the former from South Carolina and
the latter from Georgia, Mr. McCaskill's death occurring in 1841. Of seven children born
to them, all lived to be grown, and three are living at the present time. Hugh G.
McCaskill was their eldest child, and came to Arkansas in his sixteenth year, and here
acquired the most of his education and attained his majority. After the death of his
father he cared for his mother, and in 1847 was married, and settled on the home place,
where he made his home until his death. He was a man who took great interest in
agricultural matters, and in the settlement of the country, and is one of the men who
brought the country to its present admirable agricultural state. He was strictly moral in
every respect, was an earnest member of the Baptist Church, and was never heard to take
the name of God in vain. He served in the late war as a Confederate soldier, being a
member of Company G, Second Arkansas Cavalry, and was with Gen. Price on his raid through
Missouri, while under him being a participant in the engagement at Mark's Mill, Ark., also
Poison Springs. After the war he returned to his family from Texas and resumed his farm
work, which had been sadly interrupted, and continued to successfully till the soil until
his death. To himself and wife a family of eight children have been born, four of whom
lived to be grown: James M., Margaret, Eleanor and Alice, Margaret and Eleanor being now
deceased. The mother of these children died in 1882, a member of the Methodist Episcopal
Church, and her husband afterward married again, his second wife being Mrs. Amanda
Houslitch, nee Baggett, by whom he had two children, both now deceased. This lady is yet
living and makes her home in Rison, Ark., with her son, Washington Houslitch. James M.
McCaskill attained his majority in Cleveland County, and received his early training in
the common schools. At the age of nineteen years he began clerking for himself in Pine
Bluff, and then taught school for several years, his spare moments during this time being
devoted to the study of law. He was admitted to the bar in March, 1878, and has since been
an active practitioner, his thorough knowledge of law being known and recognized. In
September, 1884, he was elected county judge, a position he held four years, and upon
leaving the bench there was no reason to view his official career with disappointment. He
is a strict temperance man, and while county judge refused to grant licenses under any
circumstances. At his first election license was carried by a large majority, but Mr.
McCaskill refused to sign the same, and at his second election the county went in favor of
no license. He Las always been a strong Democrat politically, and be and his present wife
are members of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. He was first married to Miss Frances
I. Donhom, who was born in Mississippi in 1852, and died July 3, 1873, having borne Mr.
McCaskill a daughter, Eudora M., and after remaining a widower until May, 1888, Mr.
McCaskill wedded Miss Mollie C. Stone, a native of Pulaski County, Ark. They have two
children: Elvira E. and Hugh. |