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Hon. Robert H. Higgins
Hon. Robert H. Higgins, state treasurer of Colorado and for many
years one
of the builders of Pueblo, is a direct descendant of that Robert
Higgins who,
after many voyages as captain, finally settled down on Manhattan
island in 1755
and married Miss Van Zandt, the daughter of the owner of the
good ship he had
commanded. Robert H. Higgins has in his possession the evidence
of direct
descent from this hero of pre-Revolutionary days. This is the
parchment,
yellowed with age and given in turn from father to eldest son,
by which the
Frederick county (Va.) home of the Higgins family was deeded in
1762 to Robert
Higgins by Thomas Lord Fairfax. But there is much more of value
in that huge box
which Treasurer Higgins now keeps in a fireproof vault. There is
the original
military warrant granted to Captain Robert Higgins of
Revolutionary fame, "four
thousand acres, revolutionary land grant, between the Little
Miami and the
Scioto rivers" in Ohio. This is signed by President James Monroe
and dated 1817.
John Joliff Higgins, grandfather of State Treasurer Higgins, was
a native of
Ohio and served his county as sheriff for several terms, between
the years 1830
and 1840. In 1842 he was elected a major-general of volunteers
by the state
legislature and was also a presidential elector on the Martin
Van Buren ticket
in 1844.
Robert H. Higgins was born at Georgetown, Brown county. Ohio, on
April 29,
1862. His father was Robert Hetrick Higgins, who was a native of
Ohio and passed
away at his home in Georgetown, that state. During the period of
the Civil war
he served for three years and seven months as captain of Company
D of the
Fifty-ninth Ohio Volunteer Infantry. He took a prominent part in
the affairs of
his county, commonwealth and country, serving as county clerk
for fifteen years
before and after the Civil war and one term as a member of the
lower house of
the state legislature, while later he became assistant adjutant
general of Ohio.
The mother of Robert H. Higgins of this review was Matilda
Battaile Marshall
Buckner Higgins. In these names her ancestry is fairly well
outlined, for she
was a descendant of the Battaile, the Marshall and the Buckner
families of
Revolutionary days.
In 1891 Robert H. Higgins, who had spent six years with the
Santa Fe
Railroad system in Kansas, came to Colorado to go into the
smelting business. He
was again with the Santa Fe from 1896 until 1900, and from 1900
until 1907 was
active for a second time in the smelting business. From 1908
until 1916, or for
a period of eight years, he was county commissioner of Pueblo
county. This
represents the period in which the greatest progress was made in
the history of
both the city and county. The new seven hundred thousand dollar
courthouse was
built in that time without a bond issue and is all paid for. In
1909 began the
era of road building and Pueblo county today has the finest
system of
hard-surfaced roads in the state. It has, moreover, more miles
of road than any
other county of the state. In 1916 Mr. Higgins was nominated for
state treasurer
by the democrats of Colorado and was elected to the office by a
large majority,
a position which he has filled with honor to himself and credit
to the
commonwealth.
On the 4th of February, 1892. Mr. Higgins was married to Miss
Laura Alwilda
Prescott. Their living children are Ruth, Robert and Nellie.
Robert is now with
the Twenty-eighth Engineers in France. He enlisted at Camp
Meade, Maryland,
within a hundred miles of where his ancestor, the original
Robert, enlisted for
service in the Revolutionary war.
Mr. Higgins belongs to the Masonic lodge, being a thirty-second
degree
Mason, and is also a member of the Benevolent Protective Order
of Elks and the
Woodmen of the World. His political, like his business career
has been marked by
steady progress and his ability is attested by the demand of his
fellow citizens
for his service in office.
Source: Stone, Wilbur Fiske,
History of Colorado, volume III. Chicago: The S. J. Clarke
Publishing Company, 1918.
Contributed by Joy Fisher (Dec08)
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