Hugh McElroy LaRue

Hugh McElroy LaRue (1830–1906), a member of the LaRue family of Kentucky, US was a California pioneer.[1]

Hugh McElroy LaRue
25th Speaker of the California State Assembly
In office
January 1883–May 1884
Preceded byWilliam H. Parks
Succeeded byWilliam H. Parks
Member of the California State Assembly
from the 18th district
In office
1883 - 1885
Sheriff of Sacramento County
In office
1873–1875
Preceded byMike Bryte
Succeeded byM.M. Drew
Personal details
Born
Hugh McElroy LaRue

August 12, 1830
Elizabethtown, Kentucky, U.S.
DiedDecember 6, 1906 (age 76)
Davis, California, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
OccupationSheriff, rancher, farmer, railroad commissioner, politician
Known forPioneer of Sacramento, California

Biography

Hugh was born on August 12, 1830, in Elizabethtown, Kentucky, to Sarah Cummings and Jacob Hodgen LaRue.[2] When he was about nine-years-old, Hugh's family headed west to settle in Lewis County, Missouri, which was still mostly wilderness and inhabited by hostile natives. Not long after, Hugh began dreaming of settling his own family in California. So in the Spring of 1849, before news of the California Gold Rush had made it to Lewis County, Hugh joined an expedition going west, across the Great Plains, by way of the Oregon Trail.[1]

The expedition was led by one V. A. Sublette and his partner, Dr. Conduitt. After gathering provisions for the journey, Hugh and the others crossed the Missouri River in Boonville and started out from Independence on April 29, 1849. The route they followed took them along the Platte River and through South Pass, thence via Sublette's cut-off and the Oregon Trail. Near the end of the journey, they found themselves on the banks of the Truckee River, which proved to be a tremendous obstacle. Because of the rough country surrounding the river, the expedition had to cross it twenty-seven times within thirty miles. The journey finally came to an end on August 12, 1849, when the expedition arrived at the Bear River Mines, in Steep Hollow, California.[1]

Hugh spent the next several years working in the mines, on various ranches, and delivering groceries to the settlers of Shasta. He managed a small restaurant for a short time, and worked as a blacksmith in Sacramento, before a cholera epidemic persuaded him to move out of the city. Hugh then went into the agriculture business and started raising crops of all kinds. His orchards were the most successful, allowing him to expand into the horse and cattle ranching business. Over time, Hugh acquired hundreds of acres of land in Sacramento and in Yolo County. He built a town house in Sacramento, but preferred to stay out on his ranch. He married Elizaberth M. Lizenby of Kentucky in 1858 and had five children with her, four boys and one girl.[1]

According to the author J. M. Guinn, Hugh was active in politics and "staunchly Democratic". He ran for sheriff of Sacramento County in 1857 and won by just eight votes, but he lost the office because of a problem in the courts. Years later, in 1873, Hugh was again elected sheriff and served for the next couple of years. Hugh was involved in a few murder cases during his tenure as sheriff, and was responsible for hanging some of the murderers. After that he went on to become a member of the California State Assembly, also serving as its Speaker[3] and was the president of State Agricultural Society. He later ran for state senator in 1888, but was defeated. A few years later he was elected railroad commissioner from Northern California and served as the president of the board for four years. Hugh was also a member of the local Masonic Lodge and the Sacramento Society of California Pioneers, in which he served as president for a few years shortly before his death in 1906.[1]

Hugh is buried in the Masonic Lawn Cemetery in Sacramento.

See also

References

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