return to Biographies 

 

B 

 

Barney, Libeus

LIBEUS BARNEY

Extracted from History of the City of Denver, Arapahoe County, and Colorado
by O. L. Bakin & Nelson Millett, (Chicago, 1880) page 340

Contributed by:  Mary Wilson Miller

L. Barney, one of the first settlers of Colorado, was born in Bennington, Vt. Aug. 13, 1829. Most of his boyhood was spent in New York City, where he was employed as a clerk in a dry-goods house. He came to Colorado in 1859, crossing the Plains in the first stage coach of the Denver & Pike's Peak Line and for a number of years engaged in mining, but with indifferent success. Returning to Denver he, in company with his brother, built one of the first frame houses ever occupied in Denver, in which house the first provisional Legislature of Colorado met. After farming for one year, four miles down the Platte, he came back to Denver and opened a grocery store and also ran what was called the People's Theater. Of late years he has been engaged in building and improving his property in Denver, but has not been actively engaged in business.

Bennet, Hiram P. 

Hiram P. Bennet
See also: Congressional Biography
Carthage, Maine
Richland Co., OH
N.W. MO
W. Iowa
Glenwood, IA
Nebraska City, NE
Denver, CO

 

Hiram P. Bennet was born in Carthage, Maine, September 2, 1826.  His parents removed to Richland county, Ohio, in 1831, and to northwestern Missouri in 1839.  In 1844, he returned to Ohio and attended private schools and the Ohio Wesleyan University until 1850.  Having thus qualified himself to do so, young Bennet immediately became a country school teacher in northwestern Missouri, and at the same time a determined student of law.  Admitted to the Bar in 1851, he practiced in western Iowa until 1854, when he located at Glenwood, Iowa, and in 1856 at Nebraska City, Nebraska, where he was elected in that year to the upper branch of the Nebraska Territorial Legislature, presided at the organization of that body, and served in one of the stormy periods of that Territory’s struggle against slavery.  In 1855 he was the "Free Soil" candidate for Delegate in Congress from Nebraska, was elected by a small majority, but the seat was given his Democratic opponent after a contest in the House of Representatives.  In 1858 he was again elected to the Nebraska Legislature and became Speaker of the House for two sessions.

Mr. Bennet came to Colorado in the autumn of 1859, located in Denver, and began practicing law; forming in 1860 a partnership with Moses Hallett.  In July, 1861, he was nominated by the Republicans as their candidate for Delegate in Congress from the new Territory of Colorado, and was elected that year; defeating Beverly D. Williams who had been "Delegate" from Jefferson Territory," by a vote of 6,703 to 2,892.  He was re-elected for a second term, his competitors having been former Governor Gilpin and J.M. Francisco.  Upon the expiration of his Congressional service he resumed law practice in Denver.  In 1869 he was appointed Postmaster here and held that position five years.  In 1876 he was elected a Senator, from Arapahoe county, in the First General Assembly of the State of Colorado.  After his term in the Senate he resumed his practice which he continued until a few years ago when he retired for a season from active professional work, on account of poor health, but is now again engaged in the practice of law.

The foregoing is the merest outline of Mr. Bennet’s career as a citizen of Denver.  In other parts of this volume more is told of it.  There is nothing in the present life of this quiet, pleasant, gentle-mannered man to suggest the part he bore in the turbulent pioneer times when this region was practically without government.  Upon him fell the dangerous duty in most instances to be the prosecutor of desperadoes, murderers and thieves in their trials by "People’s Courts."  As an open, outspoken, relentless opponent of those foes of the community, he was a leader in the movements for their destruction; and his undauntable moral and physical courage in everything he undertook to do made him conspicuous among brave men.  He was also a participant and a leader in all the more or less successful attempts to organize and maintain provisional or emergency governments here in 1859-60-61.  Though a Territorial Delegate has no vote in Congress, Mr. Bennet while serving there was not a figurehead, but procured Executive orders and the enactment of laws of great importance to his constituents in the then new and undeveloped west.  As a member of our first State Senate, his experience and ability were of great value in shaping the beginnings of legislation under State organization.  In the history of our city and State, especially in that part of it covering the pioneer era, the student will encounter few more interesting figures, few personalities of greater influence and usefulness in the community or that filled a larger place in the affairs and esteem of the people, than that of Hiram P. Bennet.

History of Denver, with Outlines of the Earlier History of the Rocky Mountain Country, Jerome C. Smiley, editor, (c) 1901, p. 496
Brown, James H.

James H. Brown
St. Joseph, Mo.

James H. Brown, lawyer, was born in St. Joseph, Mo., September 3, 1859.  Eldest son of Henry C. Brown, our subject was an infant when his parents crossed the plains to Denver in the spring of 1860.  He received his education in the public schools of this city, the Colorado Seminary, and in the Northwestern University at Evanston, Illinois.  In 1877 he entered the Denver law office of G.G. Symes and W.S. Decker and in 1879 admitted to the bar.  In 1881, just after attaining his majority, he was admitted to practice before the Supreme Court of the United States, and immediately took charge of the long litigation between his father and the State over the site of the Capitol building, and which he conducted with extraordinary ability.  In 1886 he was elected City Attorney and served the city with his characteristic energy and fidelity to the close of the term, after which he became counsel for the Consolidated Tramway Company.  In 1890 Mr. Brown was elected a member of the Eighth General Assembly, became the leader of his party in the House, and was the author of much important legislation enacted by that Assembly.  A Republican in politics, he has served long and well in the higher councils of his party and is one of its leaders in the city and State; but neither in that nor in other avenues of activity has he permitted anything to interrupt his devotion to the profession in which he as won a stable position of distinction.




History of Denver, with Outlines of the Earlier History of the Rocky Mountain Country, Jerome C. Smiley, editor, (c) 1901, p. 708
Brown, Junius F.   
J.F. BROWN
Extracted from Colorado Pioneers in Picture and Story,
by Alice Polk Hill, copyright 1915, number 12 of 200 printed, page 104

Contributed by:  Shirley Flanagan


J.F. Brown came to Denver in 1860, and, with his brother, J.S. Brown, established a wholesale grocery house. For fifty years it ranked among the firms transacting immense business.

The brothers gradually invested vast sums in their line, and, in the course of time, engaged in enterprises incident to the development of a new commonwealth, which will make them live in the history of the State.

They passed through some trying periods in the growth of Denver; saw the town depleted in population; same men become discouraged and leave to seek other locations, but they possessed determination & energy of purpose till the clouds passed by.

They accumulated an immense fortune and Mr. Junius F. Brown retired from active business at the age of seventy, but not like the average American who retires from business-to die from lack of interest in living. Mr. Brown found an outlet for his energy in the study of art. He turned his quick intelligence which had been employed in the accumulation of wealth to the task of finding pleasure in the fortune which he had amassed. The strain of commerce was thrown off in time to cultivate the aesthetic side of his nature, and he became a fine judge of art.

He was never happier than when showing his pictures and talking about them.

One day I visited him in his art gallery, and he said frankly: "I bought pictures at first because they had bright bits of color in them, and, after studying them for a while, I outgrew them, so I exchanged them for others which I liked better. Continuing this study I found myself growing in taste, judgment and understanding. I became the despair of picture vendors he laughed, and went on. I knew what was good and I insisted upon getting it. I preserved in this way until I have one of the best small collections in this country."

Mr. Brown's daughters, Mrs. J.W. Douglas, Mrs. F.S. Titsworth & Mrs. J.J. Benedict are prominent in the social life of Denver. His only son, Harry K. Brown, is occupied with affairs of importance. 

Butler, Hugh
Hugh Butler
Airdrie, Lanarkshire, Scotland
Hawesville, Kentucky
Lewistown, Illinois
Chicago, Illinois
Central City, Colorado

Hugh Butler, of Denver, was born near Airdrie, Lanarkshire, Scotland, May 31, 1840.  His father was Thomas Butler of Kings county, Ireland, who settled in Scotland when a young man.  In 1849 Thomas Butler came to the United States an finally located in the town of Hawesville, Kentucky. In 1853 he was joined by his wife and son Hugh.  In 1857 the family removed to Lewistown, Illinois, where Hugh, who had acquired a good education, engaged in school-teaching, though he was but seventeen years of age.  With his teaching, which continued through three winters, he diligently pursued the study of law.  In 1860 he entered the office of a lawyer at Lewistown where he continued his legal studies, and was admitted to the bar in February, 1862.

Mr. Butler then went to Chicago where he began practice, remaining there until the autumn of 1863, when he removed to Colorado and located in Central City.  His abilities soon won for him a large practice and an influential position in that community.  In 1864 a vacancy occurred in the office of Prosecuting Attorney for Gilpin county, and the young lawyer was elected to fill the unexpired part of the term.  In 1865 he was re-elected for the ensuing full term, but resigned in 1866.

In the autumn of 1867 Mr. Butler was elected to the upper house of the Territorial Legislature in which he served for four years with distinction and ability.  In 1871 he was chosen Mayor of Central City, a position in which he served for one year.  In 1873 he was again elected to the upper branch of the Territorial Legislature.  In politics Mr. Butler is a Democrat, but he has never been a politician nor an office-seeker.  In 1876 he was chairman of the Democratic State Central Committee, and directed the first campaign of his party in the Centennial State.  Since that time he has not participated in political management, the demands of his professional business engrossing his attention.

Mr. Butler removed to Denver early in 1874, since which time this city has been his home, and where he advanced to the front rank of his profession in Colorado.  In 1882 Governor Grant selected him for appointment as Judge of the Superior Court of Denver, but Mr. Butler was obliged to decline the appointment on account of his large and increasing practice.  In 1892 this thorough lawyer and brilliant speaker was called to the law department of the Colorado State University, which he ably and acceptably filled.    On February 13, 1872, Mr. butler married Miss Annie, daughter of Hon. John Milton Thatcher of Kentucky.

History of Denver, with Outlines of the Earlier History of the Rocky Mountain Country, Jerome C. Smiley, editor, (c) 1901, p. 690
Byers, William N. 

William N. Byers
West Jefferson, Madison County, OH
Muscatine, IA

William N. Byers, a native of Ohio, was born near the village of West Jefferson, Madison county, that State, on February 22, 1831.  His father, Moses W. Byers, was a farmer who had located in that Ohio county when that country was but little changed from the conditions of a wilderness; and his mother, Mary A. Brandenburg, was of a family that early settled in what is now Miami county, Ohio, in the beautiful Miami valley.  The subject of this sketch spent his boyhood on his father’s farm, attended the primitive district school of the neighborhood in his earlier years, and then entered the West Jefferson Academy where, with his other studies, he learned surveying.  When he was about seventeen years old he was employed in hauling ties for the old Cleveland, Columbus & Cincinnati Railroad; his father having taken a contract to supply ties for a long stretch of that pioneer Ohio road, which passed through the home farm.  In 1850 the elder Byers with his family removed to Muscatine, Iowa; and at that time what was called the "frontier" was about half way across that State.

Young Byers did not long remain at Muscatine, though for some years afterward he regarded it as his home.  In 1851 he joined a United States surveying party organized for work in western Iowa - on the Missouri river slope of that State - and with which he was engaged through that season and in the sprig of 1852.  In the summer of 1852 he joined a party bound for Oregon, and with it crossed the plains by way of the Platte river and Fort Laramie, and thence to the Pacific coast by way of the old Oregon Trail.  The party was 145 days on the journey and, after a few days’ travel from the Missouri river, saw no white men’s habitations except those at Fort Kearney, Fort Laramie, he fur-trading posts of Forts Hall and Boise, and the Umatilla Indian Agency, until arriving at Oregon City, on the Willamette river.  In Oregon, Mr. Byers was attached to an United States surveying party engaged in work in that region, and remained with it until the close of the summer of 1853.  While thus employed he ran the first township lines in what is now the State of Washington.  In the autumn of 1853 he traversed the gold-fields of California, and then went to San Francisco.

Mr. Byers return to Iowa by way of the Pacific ocean and the Isthmus of Panama late in the autumn of 1853, reaching his home at Muscatine in the last week in December of that year, where he remained but a short time.  Congress having in the spring of 1854 created the Territories of Kansas and Nebraska, an inviting field for enterprising and ambitious young men was opened west of the Missouri river.  In the summer of 1854 Mr. Byers located in Omaha, a metropolis then represented by a partly surveyed and platted town-site of magnificent distances and one lonely log-cabin.  He was soon employed in completing the platting of the town, and afterward on survey work in the eastern part of the Territory for the United States.  On this last-mentioned work he ran the first township and sub-division lines in that Territory.  He was, also, elected a member of the first Legislative Assembly of Nebraska Territory, and in that position assisted in putting in motion the official machinery of the new Territorial government.  Upon the organization of the municipal government of the "city" of Omaha, he was elected a member of the Board of Alderman, and for two years served in that position.  He remained a citizen of Omaha until early in 1859.  He had heard the reports from the Pike’s Peak country in the summer and autumn of 1858, and had resolved to set out for it at once, but was prevented doing so by an accidental gun-shot wound that came near being a fatal one.  In the meantime, being familiar with the Platte river route to the west, and having encountered several men who had returned from the Pike’s Peak region late in the autumn of 1858, he prepared and published his "Pike’s Peak Guide" to which we have elsewhere referred.

Though he had had no experience whatever as a newspaper editor and publisher, and with but limited means at his command, Mr. Byers decided toward the close of 1858 that he would effect arrangements under which he and others would take to the new gold region the equipment and material for the publication of a newspaper.  Of the consummation of those arrangements, of the coming to Denver of that newspaper equipment, of Mr. Byers’ arrival here on April 17, 1859, and of the appearance here of the Rocky Mountain News on April 23rd, all the circumstances are elsewhere in this volume related in detail.

The life-history of Mr. Byers since he became a citizen of Denver at that time, forms a large part of the history of the city as narrated in many Chapters of this work.  As will have been seen by the reader, his name is encountered almost everywhere in the Story of Denver, in the preparation of which it became to the writer a matter of much personal interest to ascertain whether anything of commanding importance in the city’s history had been consummated without Mr. Byers’ personal participation.  The reader who follows the Story to its close will not need to be told that the exceptions to the rule are very few, and that even in most of the exceptions the indirect influence of this eminent figure in the annals of Denver is apparent.  For this reason it is not deemed necessary in this note to enter into the particulars of his long and useful life in this city; for they are interwoven in the larger part of the contents of this volume.  Nor is it needful to refer at length to his personality.  The thousands who personally know him know that it is, and know the sterling worth of our ranking pioneer; and those who do not so know him, may see the man’s nature revealed in the lines and expression of the accompanying portrait from a recent photograph, and in the picture read the character that made him a leader among men at it has made him beloved by the people of a great community and a great State.

It has been the fortune, or the opportunity, whichever it may be termed, of but few men to have witnessed so wonderful a development of an empire as that which has come within the lifetime of William N. Byers, and to have so conspicuously participated in the causes that wrought it.  He has seen the majestic panorama of civilization unroll from the Mississippi river to the Pacific Ocean over the plains and mountains he traversed as a pioneer in the vast domain; and it would seem, than he, no man bore a nobler, more unselfishly useful, part in preparing the way for it.

With the establishment of the News in April, 1859, the local record and perpetuation of the history of Denver and of Colorado began.  In that and succeeding pioneer years, Mr. Byers carefully explored, and intelligently described in his newspaper, nearly every part of the area now within the State, pointing out the great natural resources and during their development, tracing the streams to their sources, witnessing the founding of towns and hamlets, and giving to the outside world through his reports its earliest and best intelligence of the possibilities and development of the Denver region; and in two notable instances as elsewhere related, he was directly instrumental in locating in Colorado, two great colonies of eastern people about the time the first railway was completed to Denver.  Having passed through all the storms of the primitive era here, he was a leader in every movement to secure Statehood for Colorado, and in every other that promised improvement in conditions and advancement of the people’s welfare.  The favorite of the people, nothing but the unworthy strifes of contending political factions, kept him from becoming the first Governor of the State; a position for which he was in every way most eminently qualified.

Though, as already said, Mr. Byers had had, prior to his coming hither with the material for publishing the Rocky Mountain News, no experience in editing and publishing a newspaper, he immediately developed into an editor of unusual ability, and of physical and moral courage of the highest type.  His energy and fearlessness, the intimate knowledge of the entire region that he made his business to acquire, his faith in its resources and destiny, his incessant labors for its development and welfare, resulted in a personal identification with affairs and events in the progress of this city and this Commonwealth that has rarely been equalled [sic.] anywhere.  At the time he retired from the News, he had become the embodiment of the annals of the city and State in which he had for nineteen years been one of the chief directing forces; and in the esteem of the people he seemed, more than any other man, to personally represent and recall all that had been done here.  The growth and character of his newspaper had, also, reflected in its own advancement for rise and progress of the city, and of the Territory that had two years before become at last a State of the Union; and for each and all of which its editor had so tirelessly labored through the years of his service.

Mr. Byers had been appointed Postmaster at Denver in 1864 and, after a little more than two years, had resigned on account of the pressure of his private business.  Having sold and retired from the News in May, 1878, he was again appointed Postmaster, in March, 1879, and served through a term of four years and a few months.  At the close of his term he withdrew from his more active participation in business affairs and gave attention to his accumulated interests in Denver and elsewhere in Colorado.  When the Tramway Company was proposed he took part in the organization of that corporation, and ever since has been interested in and identified with it, having long been, as he now is, its Vice President.

Although, at the time of this writing, Mr. Byers has just passed his seventieth birthday, he is yet a hale and sturdy man who might readily lop off ten or fifteen years from the figures of record, notwithstanding his earlier adventurous life of many hardships and perils.  With the old-time spirit as young as ever, his interest in the progress and well-being of his city and State is undiminished, and as of old he continues to promptly respond to many calls for his services from them and from his fellow-citizens.

In November, 1854, Mr. Byers married Miss Elizabeth M. Sumner, of Muscatine, Iowa --- a granddaughter of former Governor Lucas of Ohio and later Governor of Iowa - and that union formed nearly a half-century ago, remains unbroken.  Mrs. Byers did not accompany her husband on his first journey to Denver, but soon after he had established the News he went to Omaha where she had awaited him at their home in that town, and they crossed the plains that summer, arriving in Denver on August 3rd.  They have two surviving children; Frank S. Byers, of Grand county, Colorado; and Mrs. William F. Robinson, of Denver.



History of Denver, with Outlines of the Earlier History of the Rocky Mountain Country, Jerome C. Smiley, editor, (c) 1901, p. 653-654, 656