THROUGH
MOUNTAIN MISTS
Early Settlers of Union
County, Georgia
Their
Descendants...Their Stories...Their Achievements
Lifting the
Mists of History on Their Way of Life
By: Ethelene Dyer Jones
James Lon
Duckworth, Corporation Lawyer
A younger
brother to Chief
Justice William
Henry Duckworth of the Georgia Supreme Court was James Lon Duckworth
who also
chose a career in law.
James Lon Duckworth was born October 29, 1899 to John
Francis (known as Jack) and Laura Jane Noblet Duckworth.
He was the fifth child of ten, eight of whom
grew to adulthood. When his father died December 26, 1910,
Lon was
eleven years of age. The family was
living on a farm near Old
Liberty Church,
part of the property where David and Mary Williamson Duckworth had
settled. Lon’s lineage went back to
early settler David; David and Mary’s
oldest child, John Williamson Duckworth who married Susannah Jackson; General Jackson Duckworth who married Celia
Emaline
Collins, parents of Lon’s father, John Francis Duckworth.
Laura Duckworth was faced with a
challenge
at age thirty-five when she was left a widow with eight children. For a time she managed on the Choestoe farm,
but desiring that her children have better educational opportunities,
she moved
to Young Harris. She worked hard to keep
the children with food and clothing. The children early learned to work
hard.
At a young age Lon Duckworth
vowed that if
he were ever financially able, he would see that his mother had a good
house
and economic stability. She moved from
Young Harris back to Choestoe where she married, second, Joe Townsend,
a farmer
and miller, and they had thirty years together before his death. She then moved to the Jacksonville
community near Young Harris
where J. Lon Duckworth helped to provide a comfortable and convenient
house for
her declining years.
J. Lon Duckworth graduated from Young Harris
College in 1920. From there he entered the Emory University
Lamar School of Law and graduated in 1923.
He spent a year practicing law in Lousiana, but returned to
Atlanta
where he was in the McElreath and Scott law firm, and soon was made a
partner
in that firm with the partnership name of McElreath, Scott, Duckworth
and
DuVall.
The Life Insurance Company of Georgia invited
him to become its corporation lawyer and he began work there on January 1, 1942. Through hard work, integrity and vision, he
became Vice-President and General Counsel of the company and held that
title
when he passed away on October 31, 1964 at a farm he owned near Powder Springs, Georgia.
Two days before his death, he and his family
had celebrated his sixty-fifth birthday.
He taught the Men’s Bible Class at the
Druid Hills Baptist
Church in Atlanta for many
years,
and at the Kirkwood
Baptist Church
as well. He was active in Kiwanis
International, serving as Lieutenant Governor of the Georgia District
and as president of the downtown Atlanta Club in 1955-56.
His greatest support, however, went to
the school that befriended a farm lad eager to get an education and
with little
money to pay costs. He was on the Board
of Trustees of Young Harris College and served as Executive Vice
Chairman of
the Board.
Less than a month after his death, the
Board of Trustees of Young Harris College, meeting in Atlanta on November 12, 1964,
passed a resolution honoring
the long-time Board member. Citing his
“unselfish service to Young
Harris College,”
the resolution applauded his business acumen in “a path that led ever
upward.” Noted also were his
“gentleness and humbleness…He never forgot the way he had come; nor did
he ever
put from his mind the simple faith and beliefs learned from his
Christian
parents.”
The Duckworth Library at Young Harris
College honors
James Lon
Duckworth and his brother, Chief Justice William Henry Duckworth. Lon’s wife, Ruth and their daughter, Margaret
Duckworth Sewell, survived him.
c2004
by
Ethelene Dyer
Jones; published November 11, 2004 in The Union Sentinel, Blairsville,
GA. Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
[Ethelene Dyer
Jones is a retired educator,
freelance writer, poet, and historian. She may be reached at
e-mail edj0513@windstream.net;
phone 478-453-8751; or mail 1708 Cedarwood Road, Milledgeville, GA
31061-2411.]
Updated July 16. 2018
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