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Biography of Sophia Kannady, Sebastian Co, AR

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SOURCE: History of Benton, Washington, Carroll, Madison, Crawford,
Franklin, and Sebastian Counties, Arkansas. Chicago: The Goodspeed 
Publishing Co., 1889.
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Aunt Sophia Kannady, of Fort Smith, Ark., was born in Fort Gibson, Cherokee
Nation, August 16, 1826, and is  the daughter of Aaron and Rebecca Borling.
Aaron Borling was born in London, England, June 4, 1792, and his  father, Moses
Borling, sailed for America August 31, 1793, and landed on American soil
November 5 of the  same year. He brought his family with him, and lived in
Baltimore the balance of his life. He was born April 29,  1767, and died in
1796. He was married in England to Miss Mary Cooper, March 7, 1787, and she
died in  Baltimore, at the age of twenty-six years. Aaron Borling was one of
five children born to his parents, and was  by trade a sail-maker. Being left
an orphan at an early age, he was reared by an aunt. When quite a boy he went
to sea, and followed a seafaring life for twelve years. During this time he was
married to Miss Rebecca Tucker,  a native of Maryland, born October 14, 1781.
After his marriage, Mr. Borling followed the sea until he joined  the United
States army, and with the first troops came to Arkansas, where he helped locate
Fort Smith. He was  in the Federal service for about five years, when he
finally received his discharge. He was promoted to the rank  of sergeant. His
family had previously joined him at Fort Gibson, and of the six children born
to his union, three  are now living: Sophia, subject of this sketch; Henry and
Robert. After resigning his position in the army Mr.  Borling bought a farm in
what is now Sebastian County, and upon this farm the family was reared. About
1835  Aaron Borling was employed by the Government to issue supplies to the
Seminole Indians, and in the spring of  1841 he moved back to his farm. In 1853
he moved with his family to Fort Smith, and here Mrs. Borling died  July 27 of
the same year. On March 22 of the following year Mr. Borling also died. May 19,
1847, the subject  of this sketch married Jerry R. Kannady, and their marriage
was the first one published in the first newspaper of  Fort Smith. They were
also married by the first Episcopal minister of the place. Jerry R. Kannady was
a native  of Pennsylvania, and was born at Beaver, Beaver County, on February
11, 1817, and moved to Ohio with his  family while yet an infant, their home
being in Ohio, at Hebron. He came to Fort Smith in the last of February,  1836.
He came with his uncle, Capt. J. Rogers, the founder of Fort Smith, for whom he
kept store until he  engaged in mercantile pursuits for himself, and then
engaged in various kinds of business. At the time of his  marriage he was
sutler for the United States troops at Fort Smith, for many years. During the
Civil War, Mr.  Kannady manufactured different kinds of implements. He owned
several slaves, and about 1863 he took his  wife and negroes south, remaining
in the “Lone Star State” until the close of the war. He then returned to Fort
Smith in the summer of 1865. During the latter part of the war he was in the
employ of the Confederate  Government, erecting public buildings. He was born
in 1818 and died in 1883. Mrs. Kannady has an oil  painting of Fort Smith as a
garrison, and this is valued at $700, and is the only one in existence.