H. W. Rogers, ex-sheriff, and
one of the county's most prominent men, was born in Madison County, Tenn., a son of John
Ropers, who was born in Middle Tennessee, his parents having removed there from North
Carolina at a very early day. They were tillers of the soil, and always had the reputation
of being honorable, upright people. The grandmother live to be very old, over one hundred,
and it is said by some that she lived to be one hundred and fourteen years of age. Her
death occurred in Dallas County, Ark., she having come to this State in 1849 or 1850 to
live with her children. John Ropers attained his majority in Tennessee, and after
attaining his majority he was married there to bliss Mary Ann Brown, a native of North
Carolina, who had been a resident of Tennessee from the time she was ten years of age. Her
death occurred in 1846, at the age of fifty years, she having become the mother of one
child, the subject of this sketch. Soon after her death H. V. Ropers started out in life
for himself, and after following the plow in Tennessee for one year he removed to Arkansas
in 1848, and in the spring of 1849 he went to Hot Springs for his health, after a short
stay removing from there to Bradley County in 1850y where ho opened up a small farm in
what is now this county, on the west side of Saline River. In the fall of 1850 he moved to
Pine Bluff, and engaged in the manufacture of brick, continuing in the brick business
until the opening of the war in 1861. In the spring of that year he opened a mercantile
establishment, but discontinued it in April to join the Confederate army, becoming a
member of Company A, Capt. Cameron's Company of Infantry, and was in the battle of Shiloh,
where he was wounded. Not being able to travel he joined a cavalry company, and thus
served until the close of the war, proving himself to be a brave and trusty soldier, and
of great assistance to the cause he espoused. He also took part in the engagements at
Chickamauga; Thompson's Station, being first under Forrest, and at the time of the
surrender under Wheeler. After his surrender in North Carolina he returned to his old
home, and in this county has since resided, his home since 1876 being in Toledo, at which
time he was appointed deputy sheriff for two years. At the end of this time he sold goods
at Toledo, Ark., for W. L. Connor, and was also commissioned postmaster at Toledo for two
years, after which he was elected sheriff of Dorsey (now Cleveland) County, filling the
same with success for three terms in succession. In 1886 Mr. Ropers began making a set of
abstract books of Cleveland County, which he has since completed. Work is in progress on
the abstracts of Dallas County, and it is contemplated to make abstracts of Calhoun
County, and establish an office at some point on the railroad convenient to the three
counties, with branch offices at the several county seats, for the transaction of a
general abstract and real estate business. He is a member of the A. F. & A. M.,
Culpepper Lodge No. 186, of Cleveland County, and has been a member of the same for many
years. He is a Democrat through and through, and is one of the representative citizens of
this section of the country. His maternal grandfather served in the Revolutionary War. |