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Harvey Thurston Pace

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Harvey Thurston Pace

Birth
Jefferson County, Kentucky, USA
Death
13 Aug 1876 (aged 71)
Mount Vernon, Jefferson County, Illinois, USA
Burial
Mount Vernon, Jefferson County, Illinois, USA GPS-Latitude: 38.3338353, Longitude: -88.9242914
Memorial ID
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Obituary of Harvey T. Pace
Mt. Vernon News - August 16, 1876
Hon. Harvey T. Pace
Death of an Old and Well Know Citizen

While seated at the breakfast table on Sunday morning last, Harvey
T. Pace was suddenly stricken with paralysis, and so malignant was the attack
that in less than two hours he breathed his last. Mr. Pace had been sick and
feeble for several weeks, but during the past ten or fifteen days had revived
and grown apparently better at such a rapid rate that his relatives were feeling
greatly encouraged, and were enjoying high hopes that he would live a long time
yet. Their astonishment at his sudden death can better be imagined than
described.

Mr. Pace was buried on Tuesday, his remains being followed to the
grave by perhaps the largest concourse of citizens, relatives and friends that
ever attended a funeral in Mt. Vernon. His remains were laid along side of the
estimable wife that he lost in October last - a companion whose death he had
mourned with the most intense feeling of sorrow from the day of her decease to
the moment that he breathed the last breath of mortality.

Mr. Pace, during his lifetime, filled several places of trust and
honor, having been in 1846 elected to the legislature, and re-elected for two
terms thereafter. While in the legislature, such men as Douglas, Lincoln,
Linder, and others of Illinois' great men also held seats there, and he was
personally acquainted with all of them. He was always true to the principles of
his constituents, and never faltered in casting votes that he believed would
subserve the interests of the people of the State. He was always a firm and
consistent democrat, never allowing himself to be led astray from those straight
paths that were followed with so much zeal and faithfulness by Jefferson and
Jackson. He was born in the state of Kentucky in the year 1805, and came to
Jefferson county in 1822. He almost immediately engaged in business here, and
for many years was the only merchant of any pretensions in the scope of country
now embraced in Jefferson county, including a large portion of Hamilton, Wayne,
Marion, Washington, and Franklin. As a merchant he was prompt, energetic,
honorable and straight in all his dealings with his customers, and soon built up
a very lucrative and heavy trade. In this trade, he amassed a handsome
competency, which he now leaves to his grown up children, four in number. Of
late years he did not pay much attention to merchandising, although he always
kept up a complete stock of goods at the old stand. Personally Mr. Pace bore
many remarkable traits that marked him as a man of more than ordinary
intelligence. He was a great reader, and his mind was a store-house of political
and incidental history. As a father and husband, he was kind and generous and as
a citizen, Mt. Vernon never possessed one more exemplary, or more honorable or
worthy. He was a gentleman of the old school, belonging to a class who,
unfortunately, are fast passing away - a class of gentlemen whose memories will
be cherished in after years as pleasant dreams are loved for their refining and
blessed effect upon the mind.

Submitted by Mary Jane Ohms
July 5, 2001
Obituary of Harvey T. Pace
Mt. Vernon News - August 16, 1876
Hon. Harvey T. Pace
Death of an Old and Well Know Citizen

While seated at the breakfast table on Sunday morning last, Harvey
T. Pace was suddenly stricken with paralysis, and so malignant was the attack
that in less than two hours he breathed his last. Mr. Pace had been sick and
feeble for several weeks, but during the past ten or fifteen days had revived
and grown apparently better at such a rapid rate that his relatives were feeling
greatly encouraged, and were enjoying high hopes that he would live a long time
yet. Their astonishment at his sudden death can better be imagined than
described.

Mr. Pace was buried on Tuesday, his remains being followed to the
grave by perhaps the largest concourse of citizens, relatives and friends that
ever attended a funeral in Mt. Vernon. His remains were laid along side of the
estimable wife that he lost in October last - a companion whose death he had
mourned with the most intense feeling of sorrow from the day of her decease to
the moment that he breathed the last breath of mortality.

Mr. Pace, during his lifetime, filled several places of trust and
honor, having been in 1846 elected to the legislature, and re-elected for two
terms thereafter. While in the legislature, such men as Douglas, Lincoln,
Linder, and others of Illinois' great men also held seats there, and he was
personally acquainted with all of them. He was always true to the principles of
his constituents, and never faltered in casting votes that he believed would
subserve the interests of the people of the State. He was always a firm and
consistent democrat, never allowing himself to be led astray from those straight
paths that were followed with so much zeal and faithfulness by Jefferson and
Jackson. He was born in the state of Kentucky in the year 1805, and came to
Jefferson county in 1822. He almost immediately engaged in business here, and
for many years was the only merchant of any pretensions in the scope of country
now embraced in Jefferson county, including a large portion of Hamilton, Wayne,
Marion, Washington, and Franklin. As a merchant he was prompt, energetic,
honorable and straight in all his dealings with his customers, and soon built up
a very lucrative and heavy trade. In this trade, he amassed a handsome
competency, which he now leaves to his grown up children, four in number. Of
late years he did not pay much attention to merchandising, although he always
kept up a complete stock of goods at the old stand. Personally Mr. Pace bore
many remarkable traits that marked him as a man of more than ordinary
intelligence. He was a great reader, and his mind was a store-house of political
and incidental history. As a father and husband, he was kind and generous and as
a citizen, Mt. Vernon never possessed one more exemplary, or more honorable or
worthy. He was a gentleman of the old school, belonging to a class who,
unfortunately, are fast passing away - a class of gentlemen whose memories will
be cherished in after years as pleasant dreams are loved for their refining and
blessed effect upon the mind.

Submitted by Mary Jane Ohms
July 5, 2001


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  • Created by: Carol
  • Added: May 22, 2009
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/37368872/harvey_thurston-pace: accessed ), memorial page for Harvey Thurston Pace (20 Jan 1805–13 Aug 1876), Find a Grave Memorial ID 37368872, citing Old Union Cemetery, Mount Vernon, Jefferson County, Illinois, USA; Maintained by Carol (contributor 47067994).