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Pulaski County ArArchives Biographies.....Jennings, Roscoe Green 
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Robert Sanchez http://www.genrecords.net/emailregistry/vols/00027.html#0006574 June 19, 2009, 11:39 am

Author: S. J. Clarke (Publisher, 1922)

ROSCOE GREEN JENNINGS, M. D.
    It is in the pioneer history of a community, where unusual demands are made
and where opportunities and advantages are few, that the real nature of the
individual stands most strongly forth. Meeting every exigency and every
requirement with the strength that comes from steadfast purpose and high ideals,
Dr. Roscoe Green Jennings, pioneer physician of Little Rock, made for himself a
prominent place in the affections of the people and in the regard of all who
knew him. He was born at Leeds, Kennebec county, now Androscoggin. Maine, June
11, 1833, and was the fourth son and fifth child in the family of Perez Smith
and Johanna (Lane) Jennings. The father, a man of considerable local prominence,
devoted his attention to farming and served for some time as justice of the
peace, rendering decisions that were strictly fair and impartial. He was a son
of Samuel Jennings, a native of Salem, Massachusetts, who figured prominently in
that historic old town. The great-grandfather had settled in Salem at an early
period. He, too, was Samuel Jennings and was one of three brothers who came to
America in 1703, emigrating from England to the new world. He held an important
office under King George III while this country was still numbered among the
colonial possessions of Great Britain. He suffered confiscation of his estate by
reason of his loyalty to the crown and was forced to flee into the wilderness of
  the "eastern territory" which afterward became the state of Maine. The mother
of Dr. Jennings was a daughter of James Lane, a lumberman of Fayette, Maine, who
married a member of the well known Ledbetter family, whose representatives were
particularly prominent because of their physical stature. General Ledbetter of
Confederate fame belongs to one branch of this family.

    The boyhood days of Dr. Jennings were spent on the banks of the Androscoggin
river, working on his father's farm in the summer seasons and devoting the
winter months to the acquirement of a public school education. He early learned
the value of earnest toil and discharged his duties promptly and faithfully in
every relation. When but seventeen years of age he had become so proficient in
his studies that he was chosen to teach the school in which he had previously
been a student, his salary being but fourteen dollars per month without board.
His earnings as a teacher enabled him later to attend school in Wayne village,
where he came under the instruction of Oliver O. Howard, subsequently a major
general in the army. Dr. Jennings afterward attended the academy at Monmouth and
also the Kent Hill Seminary at Readfield, Maine, and his work as a teacher in
the summer seasons enabled him to meet the expenses of his advanced education.
As he pursued his studies it was always with the hope of entering Boudoin
College, but his plans in this direction were frustrated by his father's death
in 1851. Up to that time he had never been more than twenty miles from home, but
he determined to see something of the world, and borrowing one hundred dollars,
he made his way to New York city, afterward to Pennsylvania and eventually to
Port Golden, New Jersey, where he took charge of a boys' school noted for the
rough treatment accorded former teachers. He met the situation with
determination, proved himself the conqueror of the unruly pupils and continued
to teach there for four months, after which he entered upon preparation for the
medical profession under Dr. William Cole. Soon afterward, however, he returned
to Maine, where he further studied under the preceptorship of Dr. Alonza
Garcelon, who was later governor of that state. He next attended a course of
lectures in the Dartmouth Medical College and continued his studies in the
Medical School of Maine at Brunswick, from which he was graduated with honors in
1856.

    Dr. Jennings at once made his way westward and after living at several
places for a short time, took up his abode in Lapeer, Michigan, where he
successfully practiced until December, 1857, when he became a resident of New
Orleans. He afterward made his way to Washington, Arkansas, where his eldest
brother, Hon. Orville Jennings, had previously established his home. Dr.
Jennings formed a partnership with Dr. Jett, one of the pioneer physicians, and
entered upon regular practice, while later he also became interested in the
ownership and conduct of a drug store. He became attached to the institutions
and ideals of the south and in 1861 was appointed a surgeon of the Twelfth
Arkansas Infantry in the Confederate army. In August of that year the regiment
was sent to Memphis, Tennessee, and afterward to Columbus, Kentucky, subsequent
to which time they participated in the battle of Belmont. In December the
regiment was ordered to New Madrid, Missouri, where it remained during that
winter and until March, 1862, when the place was captured by General Pope. His
regiment, already greatly reduced by disease, escaped to the Tennessee side of
the Mississippi and Dr. Jennings was ordered with the transport of one hundred
and fifty sick and wounded past the Federal batteries at Point Pleasant, at
night, to Memphis, which he reached safely. As the hospitals at this place were
full, he was then ordered to Vicksburg, Mississippi, with an additional
transport and one hundred and fifty men sick and wounded, where he placed one
hundred and fifty in the city and the same number in the Marine Hospital, and
then he rejoined the army in time to take part in the evacuation of Island Xo.
10 and witness the capture of most of his regiment. On April 7, 1862, near
Tiptonville, Tennessee, he was captured with others of his regiment but escaped
and for two weeks wandered in the bogs and swamps of that region, finally making
his way to Memphis and then to Corinth, and reported to the surgeon general of
Beauregard's army. He was assigned to duty as surgeon of Jackson's brigade,
Withers' Division of Trapiers' Corps. After the battle of Farmington, in May, he
was attacked by camp fever and was unfit for duty many weeks. In August he
returned to Washington, Arkansas, and remained until the following spring, when
he was able to rejoin his command at Jackson, Mississippi, but here was stricken
with typhoid pernicious rheumatic fever and forced to resign his commission. He
returned to his home and in March, 1864, was given permission to pass the lines
to Little Rock, then in possession of the Federal forces, for treatment. Great
sickness prevailed in the camps there and after a partial recovery he was
offered the position of contract surgeon in the United States army. He accepted
and served with satisfaction till the end of the war, later continuing duty in
the Freedmen's Hospital.

    In the meantime Dr. Roscoe Green Jennings had established a large private
practice and had rendered valuable aid to the families of absent Confederate
soldiers. He figured prominently in connection with the public life of the
community and in 1874, during the Brooks-Baxter difficulties. Dr. Roscoe Green
Jennings gave his support to the latter and was commissioned surgeon general of
the Arkansas troops. During the period of early development in Little Rock there
was built on the block bounded by Broadway, Arch, Sixth and Seventh streets a
beautiful southern home containing many spacious rooms and surrounded by
attractive shrubbery. It soon became the property of Orville Jennings, the
circuit attorney of the state and a brother of Dr. Roscoe Green Jennings. The
former was a warm friend of Colonel Robert G. Ingersoll, who was at one time his
law partner and for whom he stumped the state of Illinois during one of the
colonel's political campaigns. Subsequent to the demise of Orville Jennings,
which occurred in his handsome home in Little Rock, the property came into the
possession of Dr. Roscoe Green Jennings, who leased it for several years as the
Arkansas governor's mansion and as such it is still known to the older residents
of the city. During the time of the Civil war it was used as a hospital for
wounded soldiers. The property is still in possession of the Jennings family,
being now owned by Mrs. James Arthur Bowman, the only daughter of Dr. Roscoe
Green Jennings.

    On the 10th of April, 1869, only a few years after his return from the army,
Dr. Roscoe Green Jennings was married to Miss Gertrude Elizabeth Elliott, a
native of Camden, Arkansas, and a representative of a pioneer family of that
locality. Her father, William A. Elliott, belonged to a prominent Georgia
family, while her mother was a lineal descendant of Daniel Boone, the famous
hunter and pioneer who carried civilization into the wilds of Kentucky when it
was known as "the dark and bloody ground." Dr. and Mrs. Jennings had three
children: Octavia, the wife of James Arthur Bowman; Orville; and Elliott Crews.
The family circle was broken by the hand of death when in 1899 Dr. Jennings
departed this life. A review of his life shows that he was the possessor of many
splendid qualities and that he was a substantial contributing factor to the
upbuilding and progress of the state. He held to the highest standards in his
profession and was a prominent member of the City, County and State Medical
Societies, all of which honored him with the presidency. He became one of the
founders of the medical department of the State University and served as
secretary and executive officer thereof for thirteen years and was long one of
the lecturers of the department. In 1869 he became a member of the American
Medical Association and retained his connection therewith to the time of his
death. For thirteen years he served as examining surgeon for the United States
pension bureau and he was also a member of the state hoard of health, acting
during a part of the time as its secretary. He ever stood for progress and
improvement in all that had to do with the welfare and upbuilding of city and
state. He was active in connection with bridge building and pile driving for
fifty miles along the Texas Pacific Railroad from Dallas to Wills' Point, Texas,
in 1870-71, being one of the contractors in  connection  with  this  important 
project.

    Nor did Dr. Jennings neglect the higher and holier duties of life. He was a
consistent member of the Protestant Episcopal church and belonged to the Royal
Arcanum. In politics he voted with the democratic party but was never an
aggressive partisan. He continued in the practice of his profession at Little
Rock for many years and as time passed he gave more and more of his attention to
charity work in connection with professional duties. No one sought his aid in
vain, his broad humanitarianism prompting him to put forth a helping hand
wherever he believed he could he of real assistance to a fellow traveler on
life's journey. Thus it was that he became closely endeared to the community and
few men have passed on so deeply and widely regretted as Dr. Jennings, whose
memory is enshrined in the hearts of many who knew him, while the story of his
good deeds is cherished by all who came within the intimate circle of his
friendship.


Additional Comments:
Citation:
Centennial History of Arkansas
Volume II
Chicago-Little Rock: The S. J. Clarke Publishing Company
1922


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