Biographical Sketch of Dr. S. Paul Jones, Franklin County, Missouri

>From "History of Franklin, Jefferson, Washington, Crawford and 
Gasconade Counties", Biographical Appendix, Goodspeed Publishing 
Company, 1888.

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Dr. S. Paul Jones was born near the village of Marthasville, in Warren
County, Mo., on May 6, 1833, and now resides in St. John's Township,
Franklin Co., Mo.  His father, Dr. John Jones, was a Kentuckian by
birth, and came to Missouri (then a Territory) in 1812, and located in
the village of Marthasville, where he began the practice of medicine,
and near which place he was married to Miss Minerva Boon Callaway,
daughter of Flanders and Jemima Callaway, in 1819.  Dr. John Jones was
a man of rare ability, and at that time the most prominent and success-
ful practitioner of his profession in the State, his practice extending
over nearly all that district of country which now forms the east cen-
tral counties of the State of Missouri.  He served for many years as
surgeon of the State Militia, receiving his commission from Gov. Ashly,
who was one of the first govenors of Missouri.  His father, Giles Jones
was a native of Wales, and served under Washington during the Revolu-
tionary War.  Dr. John Jones, was assassinated January 21, 1842, by one
of a band of counterfeiters operating in the vicinity of Durst Bottom,
in St. Charles County.  Receiving some money from Mrs. Clay due him, 
and the Doctor detecting it as a counterfeit coin, he at once investi-
gated the matter and succeeded in arresting the guilty party, one Geo-
rge Murdock, who had passed the same money on Mr. Clay, and this arrest
resulted in the Doctor's assassination within a short distance of his 
office door.  His untimely and cruel death cast a shadow of gloom over
a large section of country.  His name had become a household word, and
was loved and respected; there was no one to fill his place in the 
hearts of the people.  Mrs. Minerva Boon Jones, mother of Dr. S. Paul
Jones, was born in Kentucky in 1801, and died on the old homestead near
the village of Marthasville, Mo., in December 1850.  She was the dau-
ghter of Flanders and Jemima Callaway, the latter a daughter of the 
celebrated Daniel Boon, of Kentucky, and the same Jemima Boon, who was
captured by the Indians at Boonesborogh, shortly after the arrival of
the Boon family in Kentucky.  Dr. S. Paul Jones remained with his moth-
er after the death of his father until her death.  The Doctor received 
his early education in the primitive log schoolhouse.  In 1848 he att-
ended the private school of Prof. Lewis Howell, in St. Charles County,
Mo., and finished his studies at the State University of Missouri in
1850.  In 1852 he began the study of medicine under an elder brother,
Dr. Daniel Boon Jones, at Newport, Mo., and in 1853 was a private stu-
dent of the celebrated surgeon and physician, Joseph N. McDowell, of
St. Louis, Mo.  Dr. Jones graduated from the medical department of the
University of Missouri in March, 1854, and has ever stood in the front
rank as a physician.  In 1857 he married Miss Melvina Gall, daughter of
John and Elizabeth Gall.  The former was a son of John and Margaret 
Gall, who came from Pendleton County, W. Va., in 1816, and settled on 
the farm upon which the Doctor now resides, in the year of 1817.  To
Dr. Jones and wife have been born five children: Anna E., John P.,
William A., Edward L. and Lilly (deceased).  Those living have enjoyed 
good educational advantages.  Since 1860, Dr. Jones has resided on the 
farm, where he has enjoyed an extensive and successful practice in the
capacity of a physician, but recently he has given his attention prin-
cipally to his farm duties and stock raising.  He has the honor to be 
the pioneer breeder of short horns in Franklin County, Mo.  The Doctor 
served as surgeon on the Second Regiment of McBride's Division of Gen.
Sterling Price's army, Confederate service.  He is a man of rare abil-
ity, and an earnest worker for the cause of Jeffersonian Democracy and
the primitive principles of this republic of republics, as instituted 
by its founders, and frequently contributes able articles of that 
nature to various periodicals.  He has been a member of the Masonic
Order for more than twenty years, whilst Mrs. Jones and daughter are
members of the Methodist Episcopal Church South.

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